Index to the First 21 Volumes of AVOTAYNU

Index to the First 21 Volumes of AVOTAYNU

<p> Index to the first 21 Volumes of AVOTAYNU</p><p>Algeria Civil records of Algeria and Morocco VI/1/29 Jewish community in the Touat Oases VII/4/60 Brochures on colonization of Algeria VIII/3/51 Algerian Jews VIII/3/52 About the Jews of Morocco, Algeria and Libya X/3/38 Algerian records in Aix-en-Provence XI/1/45 Conference on the Jews of Algeria XXI/3/52</p><p>Argentina History of the Jews of Argentina II/3/21 Sources of vital statistic records III/3/18 Argentina, the other Golden Land V/2/16 Jewish Immigration to Argentina VII/2/34 Inquiries to Argentina XII/1/40 Cites Argentinean source for immigrant information XII/1/66 Jewish genealogical society founded XII/3/51 Using Argentina phone books on the Internet XII/4/59 How to obtain Argentinean vital records, immigration registers, census records, genea- logical resources in Buenos Aires, history of the Jews of Chile, Jews of Rhodes XIII/2/50 History of the Moise Ville colony XIII/4/79 Moroccan community in Buenos Aires XIII/4/79 Jews of Belmonte XIV/4/69 Moises Ville colony school records XIV/4/69 Spanish Jewry XIV/4/69 My Search for Family in Argentina XVII/4/35 Jewish Colonization Association XIX/2/54 Río de la Plata XIX/2/54 Argentinian Immigration Database Now Online XIX/4/68</p><p>Australia History of the Jews of Australia I/1/03 Australian Jewish Historical Society I/1/11 Migration of Belgian Holocaust survivors III/1/21 Book review: Australian genealogy books in print III/3/31 Demography of Australian Jews in 1986 census IV/2/24 Origin of Australian Jewry VI/2/19 Comments on "Origin of Australian Jewry" article VI/3/21 First governor Arthur Phillip's Jewish origins VII/1/24 Jewish genealogical societies founded VII/4/58 Activities of Australian JGS VIII/4/53 Your Australian cousins XI/1/37 Australian family histories XI/1/43 Burials in New South Wales XI/1/43 Five regional branches of the Australian Jewish Genealogical Society XII/4/59 Jewish genealogical activity throughout Australia XIII/1/39 Egyptian Jews in Australia XIII/4/79 New group in Perth XIII/4/79 Access to census records XIV/2/47 Holocaust arrival records XIV/2/47 Computerization of Australian immigration records XIV/4/69 Sophie Caplan Honored by Australian Government XVI/1/45 Book Review: Tracing Your Family History in Australia XIX/2/66 Early Australian-Jewish History XIX/2/54 Jewish Lives in Tasmania XIX/3/52 Burial CD XIX/4/68 Earliest Jewish Doctors of Australia XIX/4/68 National Archives of Australia XIX/4/68 CD of Australia Jewish qresources XX/2/50 CD of Sydney Burials XX/2/50 Australian Military Records Online XX/4/62 Early Immigrants to Australia XXI/2/43 Melbourne Chevra Kadisha records XXI/3/52 Monograph Holdings of AJGS XXI/3/52</p><p>Austria Austrian Holocaust project planned X/2/66 Austrian Resource Cited XI/2/67 Jews Remain Identified in Austrian Baptismal Records XI/4/50 Vienna as a magnet for Austro-Hungarian Jews XII/4/26 Austrian-Jewish Records: Ill-gotten Gains XIV/2/13 Some Jewish Holdings in Vienna XIV/2/49 Jews of Vienna 1826-1945 XIII/1/39 Records from Burgenland at the Central Archives in Israel XIII/3/54 Austrian Records Controversy Continues XIV/3/17 Jewish first names in the Austrian Empire XIV/4/69 LDS Films of Viennese Registration Forms (Meldezettel)As a Genealogical Resource XVI/3/3 More About Viennese Registration Lists and Related Matters XVI/3/7 Book Review: Verdrängte Geschichte Schauplätze des Naziterrors in Oesterreich XIX/1/60 Cites Sources of German, Austrian and Czech Holocaust Victims Names XIX/4/79 Resources for Records of Vienna XX/1/34 Jewish Vital Records in Vienna: Two Sets XXI/3/22</p><p>Austro-Hungary Genealogy & migration: Jewish movement in 19th-Century Austro-Hungary XII/1/25 Residency in the Austro-Hungarian Empire XVI/4/89 The 1869 Austro-Hungarian Census XVII/3/25 Austro-Hungarian Military Records XIX/3/32</p><p>Belarus (see also Russia, USSR) Byelorussian archival holdings VI/3/10 Inquiries made at Minsk archives VI/3/39 Location of Vitebsk records VII/2/39 Minsk archives will research for $1,000 VII/3/46 What we know about genealogical records in Belarus IX/4/06 Belorussian archives revisited X/3/12 First Belarus Jewish records arrive at LDS Family History Library X/4/07 Sources for Jewish Genealogy in Belarussian Archives; New Discoveries from Recent Research XI/3/31 On-Site Research in Minsk XI/4/27 Records for the Lida District Available in the Grodno Archives XI/4/75 Book review: Jewish Documentary Sources in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. . XII/4/81 Jewish communities in Grodno province XII/4/83 The Pinkas of the Chevra Kadisha of Slutsk XIII/2/28 Not All Jewish Vital Records from Belarus Are Microfilmed XIII/2/53 RAGAS Provides Mogilev Guberniya Inventory; Visit to Ukrainian Archives XIII/4/31 Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People filming in Belarus and negotiations with Lithuanians and Russians, Chinese Jews XIV/2/47 Belarussian Resources XV/3/71 Jewish Genealogical Research in Belarus XVI/3/19 Some Belarus Records in Vilnius Archives XVI/3/27 GSU, Belarus SIG and Litvak SIG Arrange Cooperative Indexing Project XVII/1/3 Book Review: <I>Archival Judaica of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus</I> XVII/3/66 Documentation of Byelorussian Jewish History at The Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People XVIII/2/17 Book Review: Jewish Documentary Sources in Belarus Archives XX/3/61</p><p>Belgium Status of Jewish genealogy in Belgium I/1/11 Antwerp as a transit point from Eastern Europe to U.S. I/2/08 Holocaust survivors of Belgium II/1/23 The Jews of Antwerp II/2/14 Antwerp between the wars III/2/20 Accounting of Belgian Jews after Holocaust IV/2/17 Families who have lived in one place for generations V/1/15 New Belgian books on the Holocaust VI/2/25 Jews Who Contributed to the Belgian State Since Its Independence VI/3/20 Antwerp as haven for Jews after Spanish Inquisition VII/2/23 Marranos of Antwerp VIII/2/36 Jewish genealogical research in Belgium--an update XI/1/43 Museum of the Deportation and Resistance in Brussels inaugurated XI/3/62 Research on early Jews of Belgium XII/1/39 Museum of Deportation and Resistance XIII/3/49 Genealogy collections of the Jewish Museum of Belgium XIV/1/46 Jewish genealogical society founded in Brussels XIV/1/46 Resources in Belgium Illuminate Larger Geographical Area XIV/4/37 Brussels Jewry XIV/4/69 Museum of Deportation and Resistance in Mechelen (Malines), Belgium: Holdings and Activities XVII/4/14 Migrations from Eastern Europe to the Netherlands and Belgium XIX/2/29 Papers Given at Dutch/Belgian Jewish Conference XIX/3/52</p><p>Bermuda The Jews of Bermuda XIV/2/31</p><p>Book Reviews 1998 Cemetery Project on CD-ROM XIV/4/85 Address Book for Germanic Genealogy VIII/3/62 AJHS Reviews Books on Jewish Communities XIII/2/63 American Consuls in the Holy Land, 1832-1914 X/4/76 American Passenger Arrival Records IX/2/60 An Index to Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society X/4/77 Ancestry's Red Book VIII/3/63 The (Anglo) Jewish Year Book XII/1/64 Archival Sources for Canadian Jewry IV/2/25 The Archives VIII/2/54 Avotaynu Guide to Jewish Genealogy XX/3/61 Balkan Ghosts, A Journey Through History X/1/61 Bedford's Second Jewish Community X/2/63 Behind the Silken Curtain XIX/4/75 Bibliography of German-Jewish Genealogy IX/3/61 Bibliography of Projects on German Jewry and anti-Semitism IX/3/61 A Biographical Dictionary of Canadian Jewry, 1909-1914 VIII/4/61 Bohemia and Moravia Deportations: Terezin Memorial Book XII/4/81 Books About Towns XIII/2/63 Books on Hungary IX/4/69 Bridges to An American City: A Guide to Chicago's Landsmanshaften, 1870 to 1990 X/3/64 Bridging Three Worlds IX/1/62 Bukharian Jews VIII/4/62 Capital Collections: Resources for Jewish Genealogical Research in Washington, DC, Area XII/3/70 The Center: A Guide to Genealogical Research in the National Capital Area XII/3/70 Cologne Gedenkbuch XII/3/71 Companion Guide to Romania X/1/61 The Concise Dictionary of American Jewish Biography X/4/75 Dallas Jewish Genealogical Guide X/2/62 Dicionário Sefardi de Sobrenomes XIX/4/75 A Dictionary of German-Jewish SurnamesXXI/2/64 A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from Galicia XX/4/76 A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from the Russian Empire IX/1/61 A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from the Russian Empire IX/3/10 A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from the Kingdom of Poland XII/2/58 Dictionary of Surnames--some comments VI/2/26 Disraeli: A Biography XII/1/64 A Documentary History of Jewish Immigrants in Britain X/4/79 Documents of Our Ancestors: A Selection of Reproducible Genealogy Forms and Tips for Using Them XII/4/80 Do People Grow on Family Trees VIII/3/62 Edge of the Diaspora VI/4/57 Eliyahu's Branches: The Descendants of the Vilna Gaon and His Family XIII/4/96 Encyclopedia of Jewish Genealogy VII/1/34 Evidence! XIV/3/87 Family Diseases: Are You At Risk? V/3/34 Family Research for Jewish Ancestors from Baden Wurttemberg in Hohenlohe District X/3/63 FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions About Jewish Genealogy XIII/1/64 Finding Home: In the Footsteps of the Jewish Fusgeyers XXI/1/60 Finding Your Jewish Roots in Galicia: A Resource Guide XIV/3/87 First American Jewish Families VIII/2/53 Following the Paper Trail: A Multilingual Translation Guide VIII/3/63 From a Ruined Garden: The Memorial Books of Polish Jewry XIV/4/85 From Generation to Generation X/3/59 From King David to Baron David VI/2/23 Gedenkbuch VII/3/36 Genealogical Guide to East and West Prussia XIX/4/75 Genealogical Resources in the New York Metropolitan Area V/1/29 Genealogica Hebraica: Jews of Portugal and Gibraltar VI/4/58 Genealogical Resources in the Atlanta Area XII/3/70 The Genealogist's Address Book VIII/4/62 A Genealogist's Guide to Discovering Your Female Ancestors XIV/4/85 De Geschiedenis van het Joodse Geslacht Schuit XII/2/63 Going Greek: Jewish College Fraternities in the United States, 1895-1945</I? XIX/3/65 Guide Book: Jewish Sights of Bohemia and Moravia IX/1/63 Guide to Jewish Italy VIII/1/55 A Guide to U.S. Military Records X/4/79 Hamburg Passengers from the Kingdom of Poland and the Russian Empire XIII/2/63 Handbook for Archival Research in the USSR V/4/10 Historical Atlas of Central Europe XXI/2/64 Hoffnung Amerika X/2/61 Index to Florida Jewish History in the American Israelite, 1854-1900 IX/2/59 In Memoriam XII/3/71 In Search of Your European Roots II/1/32 In Their Words--Volume 2: Russian XIX/1/60 Inventory of Emigration Sources in the Bremen Archives .X/3/62 Jacob's Children in the Land of the Mahdi: Jews of the Sudan XIII/4/96 Jadid Al-Islam: The Jewish "New Muslims" of Meshhed XIV/2/61 Jewish Community of Frankfurt V/3/34 Jewish Documentary Sources in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus XII/4/81 Jewish First Names in Amsterdam XIII/2/63 Jewish Genealogy Beginner's Guide VII/4/66 Jewish Heritage Travel: A Guide of Central and Eastern Europe IX/4/68 Jewish Immigration to Argentina VII/2/34 Jewish Memories in Alsace: Marriage Contracts of the 18th Century XIII/3/63 Jewish Personal Names: Their Origin, Derivation and Diminutive Forms VIII/3/61 Jewish Roots in Poland: Pages from the Past and Archival Inventories; And I Still See Their Faces: Images of Polish Jews; Guide to the YIVO Archives; Luboml: Memorial Book of a Vanished Shtetl XIV/1/63 The Jewish Travel Guide IX/4/68 Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia XIII/4/96 The Jews in Poland and Russia--Biographical Essay III/1/38 Jews in Poland: A Documentary History IX/4/69 The Jews in Poland and Russia: Bibliographical Essays XII/2/63 The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia: A Historical Reader X/1/60 The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia: a Historical Reader IX/1/63 Jews of Germany: A Historical Portrait X/1/63 The Jews of Hungary: History, Culture, Psychology XII/3/72 The Jews of Kurdistan X/1/63 The Jews of Lithuania XII/2/61 Jews of Posen in 1834 and 1835 IV/2/26 Jews of Toronto: A History to 1937 III/2/32 Korzenie Polskie: Polish Roots IX/2/61 The Library VI/4/58 The Library of Congress VI/3/32 Library Resources for German-Jewish Genealogy XIV/3/87 Literature on Jews in Russian, 1890-1945 X/4/79 Literature on Jews in Russian, 1890-1945 XII/1/65 Lithuanian Jewish Communities VII/3/36 The Lonely Days Were Sundays: Reflections of a Jewish Southerner X/3/63 The Lord's Jews VIII/2/52 The Luckiest Orphans: A History of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum of New York IX/2/60 Marriages in Amsterdam X/2/60 Morton Allen Directory IX/3/62 Names of Jewish Victims of Hungarian Labor Battalions IX/1/62 Comments on Jewish Personal Names review VIII/4/66 Parish Registers in Slovakia IX/4/67 Patterns of Migrations, 1850-1914 XIII/3/63 Poles and Russians in the 1870 Census of New York City IX/3/62 Polish Countrysides: Photographs and Narrative XII/4/81 Proceedings of the 5th International Seminar on Jewish Genealogy XIV/3/87 Producing a Quality Family History XII/4/81 Research Guide to Materials on Russian Jewry in Selected Archives of the Former Soviet Union X/3/61 Resources for Jewish Genealogy in the Boston Area XII/3/70 Resources for Jewish Genealogy in the New York area II/2/28 Roots IV: Software to Make History IX/3/62 Russia Gathers Her Jews IV/3/17 Russian-Jewish Given Names: Their Origins and Variants XIV/2/61 San Francisco Bay Area: Gold Mine for Jewish Genealogical Research XII/3/71 The Sephardic Journey: 1492-1992 VIII/3/63 Sephardim in America IX/4/65 The Source I/1/16 Sourcebook for Jewish Genealogies and Family Histories XII/4/80 The Standard for the People: The 150th Anniversary of the Wellington Hebrew Congregation, 1843-1993 XII/1/65 State Census Records VIII/4/62 Synagogues, Prayer Houses and Their Employees in the Pale of Settlement and Kurland and Livonia Provinces of the Russian Empire, 1853-1854 IX/2/59 Taking Root--The Origins of the Canadian Jewish Community IX/1/64 Taschenbuch f�r Familiengeschichtsforschung XIII/3/63 The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy XIII/1/64 Their Father's House VI/3/33 These Are the Names: Studies in Jewish Onomastics XIV/4/85 They Became Americans: Finding Naturalization Records and Ethnic Origins XIV/4/85 They Came in Ships X/1/63 A Thousand Threads: A Story Told Through Yiddish Letters XXI/3/64 The Timetables of Jewish History X/4/77 Timetables of History X/4/77 A Travel Guide to Jewish Europe IX/4/68 The Unbroken Chain VI/1/37 Australian genealogy books in print III/3/31 Where Once We Walked VII/1/33 Wooden Synagogues X/1/62 Your English Ancestry: A Guide to North Americans X/2/62 Zidovsk‚ N bozensk‚ obce na Slovensku IX/1/63 Documentary Sources on Jewish History in the Archives of the CIS and Baltic States XI/1/63 History and Culture of the Jews in Swabia XI/1/64 A Cat Called Adolf XI/1/65 Vom Shtetl an Die Lower East Side: Galizische Juden in New York XI/1/65 In Search of Your European Roots XI/1/66 The Jewish Burial Ground at Jewbury XI/1/66 Migration from the Russian Empire: Lists of Passengers Arriving at the Port of New York XI/2/61 Judaica Americana XI/2/62 Yiddish Cuisine: A Gourmet's Approach to Jewish Cooking XI/2/63 Eat and Be Satisfied, A Social History of Jewish Food XI/2/63 Who's Who in My Family XI/2/63 The Jewish Traveler: Hadassah Magazine's Guide to the World's Jewish Communities and Sights XI/2/63 How to Document Victims and Locate Survivors of the Holocaust XI/3/78 Germanic Genealogy: A Guide to Worldwide Sources and Migration Patterns XI/3/79 The Echoes That Remain XI/3/80 Death Books from Auschwitz Remnants XI/3/81 The History of the Harrogate Jewish Community XI/3/81 A Guide to Jewish Genealogical Research in Israel XI/4/73 Gedenkbuch Berlins der Judischen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus XI/4/74 Hamburger J�dische Opfer des Nationalsozialismus: Gedenkbuch XI/4/74 French Children of the Holocaust XV/1/64 Mosaic: A Chronicle of Five Generations XV/1/64 The Hidden Half of the Family: A Sourcebook for Women's Genealogy XV/1/64 The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia XV/2/65 The Jews of Jamaica XV/2/65 Kaminits-Podolsk and Its Environs XV/2/65 If I Forget Thee...: The Destruction of the Shtetl Butrimantz XV/2/65 Jewish Roots in Ukraine and Moldova: Pages from the Past and Archival Inventories XV/3/68 Padyavand XV/3/68 Organizing Your Family History Research XV/3/68 The Jewish Victorian XV/4/61 Faces of the Jewish Experience in China XV/4/61 Nous Sommes 900 Francais XV/4/61 Avnei Zikaron XV/4/61 A Social History of the Jews of Hong Kong: A Resource Guide XV/4/61 The Book of Sorrow XV/4/61 DoroTree: The Jewish Genealogy Software; Getting Started Books XVI/1/63 Photos Capture "The Way We Were" XVI/1/63 Dozens of Cousins: Blue Genes, Horse Thieves and Other Relative Surprises in Your Family Tree XVI/2/65 Two Guides to the Slovak Archives XVI/2/65 Saskatoon Jewish Community XVI/2/65 History of the Jews in Poland and Russia XVI/3/65 The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of Jews and Gypsies Under the Antonescu Regime, 1940-1944 XVI/4/87 In Their Words: A Genealogist's Translation Guide to Polish, German, Latin and Russia Documents. Volume 1: Polish XVI/4/87 Frauen in den Aussenlagern des KZ Flossenbürg XVII/1/73 The Litvaks: A Short History of the Jews of Lithuania XVII/1/73 The American Census Handbook XVII/1/73 A Dictionary of Ashkenazic Given Names XVII/2/63 The History of the Jews of Germany in Modern Times XVII/2/63 Long Distance Genealogy: Researching Your Family History from Home XVII/2/63 Discovering Your Jewish Ancestors XVII/3/66 Archival Judaica of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus XVII/3/66 From Shtetl to Milltown: Litvaks, Hungarians and Galizianers In Western Pennsylvania 1875-1925 XVII/4/78 The Family Orchard; Kastner's Haggadah XVII/4/78 Beit Rabbanan: Sources of Rabbinical Genealogy XVIII/1/65 History of Latvian Jews XVIII/1/65 At the Edge of Memory: A Family Story XVIII/2/61 Who Sailed on Titanic? The Definitive Passenger Lists XVIII/2/61 Jewish Given Names and Family Names: A New Bibliography XVIII/2/61 Jewish Surnames in Amsterdam, 1669-1850 XVIII/2/61 The Holocaust in Lithuania 1941-1945: A Book of Remembrance XVIII/3/62 Names of the Deported Jews from Zala County XVIII/3/62 Jewish Officers in the Polish Armed Forces, 1939-1945 XVIII/3/62 Portraits of Our Past: Jews of the German Countryside XVIII/3/62 120 HIAS Stories XVIII/4/88 The ShipsList CD-ROM: Passenger Ship Arrivals, Canadian Ports 1865-1899 XVIII/4/88 A Dictionary of German-Jewish Surnames XXI/2/64 A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from Galicia XX/4/76 A Thousand Threads: A Story Told Through Yiddish Letters XXI/3/64 Avotaynu Guide to Jewish Genealogy XX/3/61 Behind the Silken Curtain XIX/4/75 Dicionário Sefaradi de Sobrenomes XX/1/56 Dicionário Sefardi de Sobrenomes XIX/4/75 Finding Home: In the Footsteps of the Jewish Fusgeyers XXI/1/60 Genealogical Guide to East and West Prussia XIX/4/75 Going Greek: Jewish College Fraternities in the United States, 1895-1945</I? XIX/3/65 Historical Atlas of Central Europe XXI/2/64 In Their Words--Volume 2: Russian XIX/1/60 Jewish Documentary Sources in Belarus Archives XX/3/61 Journey to a Nineteenth-Century Shtetl: The Memoirs of Yekhezkel Kotik XX/2/50 Legacy: The Saga of a German-Jewish Family Across Time and Circumstance XX/1/56 Memorial to the Jews Deported from Greece XXI/2/54 Memorial Volumes to Jewish Communities Destroyed in the Holocaust XX/4/76 Mixed Blessings: New Zealand Children of Holocaust Survivors Remember XIX/3/65 Our Lives Are But Stories: Narratives of Tunisian-Israeli Women XIX/3/65 Prisoner Deaths in Majdanek 1942 XXI/2/64 Quellen zur Geshichte der Juden in Polnischnen Archiven Biographisches Handbuch der Rabbiner XX/2/67 Right to Exist: A Moral Defense of Israel's Wars XIX/3/65 Sefer HaZikaron LeKehilat Yurburg-Lita XIX/4/75 Sephardic Genealogy: Discovering Your Sephardic Ancestors and Their World XIX/1/60 Sephardic Onomasticon XXI/2/64 The Diaries of Bernhard Cahn: A Man of His Time XX/1/56 The Jewish Nation of the Caribbean XIX/1/60 The Journeys of David Toback XXI/3/64 The Lost Tribes of Israel: The History of a Myth XIX/3/65 The Lurie Legacy XX/3/61 Tracing Your Family History in Australia XIX/2/66 Two Worlds XXI/3/64 Verdrängte Geschichte Schauplätze des Naziterrors in Oesterreich XIX/1/60 Volumes on Hungarian Jewry during the Holocaust XXI/1/60 What's Behind a Name XIX/2/66 Zród a archiwalne do dziejów Ż ydów w Polsce XIX/3/65 Brazil History of the Jews of Brazil IV/3/19 Books on Jewish tombstone inscriptions in Brazilian cemeteries IV/3/19 Dicionario Biografico--1500-1808 V/3/23 Crypto Jews in the State of Par VI/1/29 Sources of genealogical records VI/3/20 Famous Jewish Brazilian families VI/4/50 Jews, Judaizers and their slaves VII/1/20 Additional books by Egon and Frieda Wolff VII/3/28 Dicionario Biografico--Volume 4 VII/4/58 Memorial to two Jews buried in Vassouras VIII/4/53 Jews in the Amazonian rain forest IX/1/35 Books available on Brazilian Jewish history IX/3/47 Jews and marranos in northern Brazil IX/4/48 "Jewish Priest" of Caico IX/4/49 The Amzalak family history X/1/43 Jewish migration patterns X/4/62 Using Inquisition records X/4/62 Jews in the Amazon XI/2/47 Bentes family of Brazil XI/2/47 Jewish Memorial opens in Vassouras, Brazil XI/3/63 Early Jewish presence in Brazil XV/3/29 Saltiel Family of Brazil XX/1/47</p><p>Bulgaria Bulgarian Jewish names XII/2/45 Projects to Document Jews of Turkey, Salonika, Bulgaria, and Belgrade XIV/2/40 Jewish Surnames from Bulgaria XIX/3/52 Jews of Bulgaria XIX/3/52</p><p>Canada Work of Jewish Genealogical Society in Montreal I/1/12 Jews of Toronto I/2/09 Jewish Public Library of Montreal II/2/14 Immigration records at Archives of the Canadian Jewish Congress II/3/12 JIAS records--Toronto II/3/15 JIAS inventories at Canadian Jewish Congress III/2/16 Book review: Jews of Toronto: A History to 1937 III/2/32 Book planned--Archival Sources for the Study of Canadian Jewry III/2/34 History of emigration from France IV/1/20 Book review: Archival Sources for Canadian Jewry IV/2/25 Jewish genealogical research in Canada IV/3/04 Dun & Bradstreet records V/1/15 United Restitution Organization V/3/24 Jews of Toronto V/3/24 United Restitution Organization finding aid available VI/1/25 Inventorying Jewish cemeteries VI/3/20 Planned compilations VI/4/51 Sources for early Jewish-Canadian history VII/2/23 Plan to document cemeteries of Ontario VII/2/24 Record books of Park Memorial Chapel VII/4/58 Toronto's Roseland Cemetery burials documented VII/4/58 Some Montreal Jewish holdings VIII/3/50 Jewish archives of Toronto VIII/3/50 Cemeteries in Quebec and Maritime Provinces computerized VIII/3/50 Jewish genealogical resources in Canada VIII/4/27 1901 Federal census to be available soon VIII/4/54 Book review: A Biographical Dictionary of Canadian Jewry, 1909-1914 VIII/4/61 Documenting the Roselawn Cemetery IX/1/36 Vital records of Ontario IX/1/37 Canadian ship arrivals IX/1/37 Book review: Taking Root--The Origins of the Canadian Jewish Community IX/1/64 Resources at Archives of Ontario IX/2/47 The Jews of the Canadian West IX/3/23 Tapes available for lectures at recent annual seminar IX/3/48 Canadian synagogues are found with new archives guide IX/3/66 Analysis of Canadian censuses, Montreal synagogues IX/4/50 Vital statistic indexes at the Archives of Ontario X/1/45 Canadian synagogue finder guide developed by Canadian Jewish Congress X/2/65 Analyzing Canadian census records X/4/63 Update on cemetery project X/4/63 Policy governing access to the Canadian Jewish Immigrant Aid Society records XI/1/06 Russian acquisitions by National Archives of Canada XI/1/44 Jews of Newfoundland XI/1/44 Cites source of Jewish history in Western Canada XI/1/67 Canadian ship arrival records XI/3/63 Canadian voter lists XI/4/54 Canadian naturalization records XII/2/42 Jews of Toronto, Canadian assessment rolls XII/3/52 Toronto assessment records XII/4/61 Records of the Baron de Hirsch Institute records in Montreal XIII/1/39 Roselawn cemetery project XIII/1/39 Some Canadian vital records available via Internet XIII/1/39 Look Up Your Canadian Ancestors in the Library XIII/3/22 Record access to immigration records XIII/3/49 Vital statistic records and other sources in Ontario XIII/3/49 Canadian Naturalization Records XIII/3/66 Passenger lists 1919-35 now at National Archives XIII/4/79 Austrian victims of the Holocaust XIV/2/47 Censuses of Newfoundland XIV/2/47 Jewish Genealogical Research in Canada XIV/4/23 Addresses of Canadian vital records offices XIV/4/69 Jewish genealogical resources in Quebec province XIV/4/69 Jewish Historical Society of Yukon XIV/4/69 World War I military records XIV/4/69 Book Review: Saskatoon Jewish Community XVI/2/65 Affidavits Supply Data on Canadian Immigrants XVII/2/39 Canada's Census: A Thing of the Past? XVIII/1/30 Searching for Your Family in the Quebec Vital Records Database XVIII/1/80 Indexing the Jewish Vital Records of Quebec 1841-1942 XVIII/2/34 Notes Canadian Immigration Forms XVII/2/66 The 1915-1932 Canadian Naturalization Index XVIII/3/31 Book Review: The ShipsList CD-ROM: Passenger Ship Arrivals, Canadian Ports 1865-1899XVIII/4/88 Canadian Genealogy Centre opens XIX/2/54 1883 Article on Immigration XX/2/50 New JGS in Hamilton XX/2/50 Toronto's First Jewish Cemetery XX/2/50 History of the Jews of Canada XX/3/47 Use of Land Records XX/3/47 History of Canadian Jewry X/4/62 Toronto Burials Project XX/4/62 Toronto's Earliest History XX/4/62 Use of Land Title Records XX/4/62 Dawes Road Cemetery Project XXI/2/43 Jewish immigration to Toronto XXI/2/43 More Canadian City Directories Online XXI/2/43 Newfoundland Jews XXI/2/43 Pre-1868 Records XXI/2/43 Database of Canadian Divorces XXI/3/52 Newsletter for Montreal JGS XXI/3/52</p><p>Canary Islands The Jews of the Canary Islands XIV/4/29</p><p>Caribbean Lists of Jews in Oldambtand, Hoogeveen and Surinam IX/2/49 Jewish cemetery on Nevis X/2/48 A visit to St. Eustatius II/2/31 Jews in the Islands of the French West Indies V/4/13 Jews of exotic Surinam and their history VIII/2/16 The Jews of the Caribbean XI/3/48 Book Review: The Jews of Jamaica XV/2/65 Suriname Cemetery XVIII/4/67 Book Review: The Jewish Nation of the Caribbean XIX/1/60</p><p>China Consular records in Shanghai about Jewish refugees X/2/23 Hoover Institution has Shanghai consular records X/2/67 Books on the Jewish Shanghai experience XI/3/62 Shanghai Jewish refugee book now available XII/1/67 The Tenacity of Jewish Identity: A Chinese Case Study XV/4/31 Book Review: Faces of the Jewish Experience in China XV/4/61 Shanghai and Tsingtao Municipal Records in the U.S. National Archives XVI/1/33 Shanghai HIAS Lists XVII/4/19 Yiddishkeit on the Yellow River XVIII/1/45 Shanghai HIAS Lists Available for Research at YIVO XX/1/58</p><p>Computers Computers and genealogy VI/1/11 Genealogy software: Relativity VII/3/38 Genealogy software: Personal Dorot VII/3/39 A proposed standard in genealogical software systems for identifying Jewish persons with no surnames VIII/1/40 Computer bulletin boards as a tool for the exchange of data VIII/2/33 Macintosh software for Jewish genealogy IX/3/26 Software review: Roots IV: Software to Make History IX/3/62 Computer resources for Jewish genealogy X/1/35 Comments on PAF features X/1/64 Program to help in documenting names on gravestones X/1/67 Internet for Greenhorns XII/3/03 Avotaynu puts database on Web XII/3/07 List of Internet World Wide Web Sites For Jewish Genealogy Research XII/4/21 Ilanot: Jewish Genealogy Software XIV/2/63 Only a Mouse Click Away: Using the Internet to Build Your Family Tree XVI/4/43 Internet Subscription Databases for Genealogical Research XVIII/3/20</p><p>Costa Rica History of the Jews of Costa Rica V/4/S6</p><p>Croatia Jewish Community Records of Croatia Filmed by LDS Family History Library XV/2/5 Researching Jewish Family History in Croatia, Slavonia and Hungary XVII/3/28</p><p>Cuba Jews of Cuba XIX/2/54</p><p>Cyprus Documenting Cypriot Jews V/2/26</p><p>Czech Republic (see also Slovakia) Jewish genealogical research in Czechoslovakia IV/1/03 Important address ... for Czechoslovakian research V/4/05 Austro-Hungarian military records available VI/1/41 News for Czechoslovakia VI/1/41 Genealogical research in Czechoslovakia: An update VI/3/08 Jewish genealogical research in Slovakia VII/1/08 Complete catalogue of records for the Jewish communities of Bohemia and Moravia, excluding that of Prague VII/3/20 History of record keeping in Bohemia VII/3/22 Book review: Guide Book: Jewish Sights of Bohemia and Moravia IX/1/63 Book review: The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia: a Historical Reader IX/1/63 Survey of Jewish monuments in the Czech Republic IX/2/22 List of cemeteries surveyed in the Czech Republic IX/2/23 Recommends source for genealogical inquiries in Czech Republic IX/4/70 Book review: The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia: A Historical Reader X/1/60 Connections in the Czech Republic XII/2/21 On-Site Jewish Genealogical Research in the Czech and Slovak Republics XII/3/15 Archives in Bohemia and Moravia XII/3/17 Book review: Bohemia and Moravia Deportations: Terezin Memorial Book XII/4/81 Reclaiming Property in the Czech Republic XVI/4/89 Restoration of Jewish Heritage in South Bohemia: A Project of the Rozmberk Society XVI/4/37 Cites Sources of German, Austrian and Czech Holocaust Victims Names XIX/4/79 Moravia Revisited XX/4/11 Book on Moravia/Silesia Monuments XXI/1/62 Combining Censuses and Familiant Records in Bohemia XXI/3/12</p><p>Denmark The origins and history of Danish Jewry VIII/1/35 Danish Emigrant Lists on Web Include Many Russian Jews XIII/4/98</p><p>DNA Genetic Analysis of Jewish Origins XVI/1/15 Company Offers DNA Testing XVII/1/39 21st-Century DNA Confirms 18th-Century Relationship XVIII/1/19 Hubscher DNA Genetic Distance Analysis XIX/4/66 How Does DNA Testing Help Genealogists? XX/2/17 Jewish Genetics in 1984 XX/2/20 DNA Testing Shows Disparate Families Have Common Ancestor XX/4/79</p><p>East Europe--General Our elusive ancestors XII/1/03 General problems of Eastern European Jewish onomastics XII/2/07 News from RAGAS XV/3/26 Avotaynu Offers JPGs of Jewish Life in Eastern Europe XVI/1/42 Eastern European Jewish Emigration via Hamburg XVII/2/11 Eastern European Archival Database Planned XVII/3/3 Tracking Family Documents Across Eastern-European Borders XVIII/1/3 Box Tax: A Tax on Jews, for Jews XVIII/4/43 New Local Jewish History Books Appearing in Eastern Europe XXI/2/58</p><p>Egypt Reports on Egyptian records, group for study of Jewish languages IX/3/66 History of the Jews of Egypt X/1/30 Vital Records from Egypt Available XIII/3/33 Egyptian Jews in Australia XIII/4/79 Egyptian-Jewish Expatriates Form International Society XV/3/32 Organization Preserves Egyptian-Jewish History XVII/3/67 Jews in Egypt XX/2/50 The 1840 Montefiore Census of the Jews of Alexandria, Egypt XX/4/18</p><p>England Pamphlets about Jewish communities in Britain I/1/12 Jews of Birmingham, work of the Jewish Historical Society I/1/13 Jewish yearbook of 1896 I/2/09 How to obtain vital statistic records from the United Kingdom II/1/23 Bibliography used at family history workshop II/2/16 Guide to British census records II/2/21 Immigration records in London II/3/16 An American perspective on London research II/3/17 Jewish cemeteries in London II/3/23 The value of wills to the genealogist III/1/20 Recent acquisitions at the Museum of the Jewish East End III/2/20 London International Seminar--Sources of British records III/3/04 Book available about Jews arriving in Birmingham 1933-1945 IV/3/20 Maritime museum wants oral histories and records V/1/15 Listing of London Jewish cemeteries available V/2/17 Status of Chief Rabbi's records VI/2/26 More on status of Chief Rabbi's records VI/3/20 Describes status of Chief Rabbi's records VI/3/38 Hyamson and Colyer-Fergusson collections VII/1/15 History of preservation of documents in Office of the Chief Rabbi of UK VII/1/17 Organizational division of British Jewry VII/2/24 Comment on Hyamson and Colyer-Fergusson collection article VII/2/25 Bevis Marks Records Part 4 VII/2/25 Older London burial records and sites VII/3/24 Locates Hyamson and Colyer-Fergusson collections VII/3/46 Poor Jews Temporary Shelter registers (1896-1914) VII/4/58 More on the Colyer-Fergusson collection VIII/2/28 Census of 1891 released VIII/2/36 Jewish Genealogical Society of Great Britain founded VIII/2/36 Research using the 1891 census VIII/2/42 Describes resources available from Court of the Chief Rabbi VIII/2/58 Resources at Jews College VIII/3/50 First meeting of JGS of Great Britain VIII/3/50 Conference on Jewish Patterns of Migrations planned in England for June 1993 VIII/4/65 Plans to index 1770-1905 registers of the old Hambro Synagogue IX/1/38 1871-80 index of Jewish Chronicle IX/1/38 Jewish blood in the British royal family IX/2/43 Dealings with Central Registry Office IX/2/47 Passenger lists of British Public Records Office IX/2/47 Early years of Leeds Jewish community IX/2/48 London West End project planned IX/2/63 Bevis Marks synagogue needs repair IX/2/63 Additional resources for Anglo-Jewish genealogy IX/3/49 More on royal Jewish blood IX/3/50 Manchester Jewry IX/4/51 English naturalizations 1902-06 IX/4/51 Bevis Marks Records--Part V Jews of South West England IX/4/51 Jews of Portsmouth X/2/50 Bevis Marks Records X/2/50 Jews of southwest England X/2/50 Book review: Your English Ancestry: A Guide to North Americans X/2/62 Book review: Bedford's Second Jewish Community X/2/63 Expands on Jewish ancestry of British royal family X/2/66 Book on 1891 census X/3/44 Naturalization and name changes in the British Isles X/3/44 Book review: A Documentary History of Jewish Immigrants in Britain X/4/79 Court of Chief Rabbi in London XI/1/43 Indexing of London synagogue records XI/1/44 The Jewish Burial Ground at Jewbury XI/1/66 The History of the Harrogate Jewish Community XI/3/81 New chapter formed in southern England XII/1/40 Book review: The (Anglo) Jewish Year Book XII/1/64 Book review: Disraeli: A Biography XII/1/64 Newly discovered pinkassim of the Harkavy Collection XII/2/32 British Telcom archives XII/3/53 Studies in Anglo-Jewish history XII/3/53 Jewish south-west of England census returns 1841-1891 XII/3/54 Federation of Synagogues records XII/3/54 Personal research at the Mocatta Library XII/3/54 Dover Jewry XIII/1/39 Poor Relief Application of Glasgow XIII/1/39 Public Record Office in Kew XIII/1/39 1851 British census XIII/2/50 Family trees in society library XIII/3/49 Willesden cemetery XIII/3/49 English wills XIII/4/79 Jews of Northampton XIII/4/79 Using the Records of the Poor Jews' Temporary Shelter XIV/1/37 Elizabethan marranos XIV/1/46 Jews' Free School XIV/1/46 Web site for JGS of Great Britain XIV/1/46 Society has Web site, Southampton University's Jewish archives XIV/2/47 Royal Geographic Society Map Room XIV/3/69 Untapped London resources XIV/3/69 Veterans museum XIV/3/69 Book on Jews of Cornwall, England, planned XIV/4/69 Jewish cemeteries of East Kent XIV/4/69 Jews of Merthyr Tydfil, Wales XIV/4/69 Book Review: The Jewish Victorian XV/4/61 Using CD-ROM Databases and the Internet to Research England from Afar XVI/1/25 Major London Record Offices for 2001 XVI/3/46 Research in London and Liverpool with London 2001 in Mind XVI/4/27 Leeds in the LDS Library XVI/4/28 Bevis Marks and the London Sephardi Community XVII/1/29 Genealogical Resources at London's Guildhall Library XVII/1/30 The Role of Shelters in Jewish Migration Via the United Kingdom 1850-1914 XVII/1/31 1901 British Census Released XVIII/1/12 Genealogical Resources in the British Library Hebrew Collection XVIII/1/39 Questions Restrictions on British Vital Records Access XVIII/1/67 Information Source for Jews Who Served with British Military Forces XVIII/2/41 Jewish Soldiers Killed in WWI XIX/1/47 Provincial Anglo-Jewry XIX/1/47 Re-admission of Jews to England in the Mid-17th Century XIX/2/54 Jewish Military Personnel, Ethics and Genealogy XIX/3/52 Burial Records at Federation of Synagogues XX/1/47 Hull Jewish Cemetery Records XX/1/47 Jews Free School XX/1/47 New Internet Resources for Research in the United Kingdom XX/1/26 Personal Announcements in London Jewish Chronicle XX/2/50 Marriage Index for London Great Synagogue 1791-1885 XX/3/47 Anglo-Jewish Charities XXI/1/47 United Synagogue Records XXI/1/47 British Naturalization Records XXI/2/43 Cataloguing of Naturalization Records XXI/2/43 Old Bailey Prison of London Records Online XXI/2/43 Index to London Jewish Chronicle XXI/3/52 Naturalization Records at the British National Archives XXI/3/09</p><p>Estonia (see also Russia, USSR) Judaica in the Historical Archives of Estonia IX/3/15 Jewish vital records from Estonia filmed by Family History Library XII/2/43 Estonian records XIV/3/69 Attitude of Baltic Peoples Toward the Jews During World War II XIX/2/47 Jewish Surnames in the Baltic Countries XX/4/28</p><p>Ethiopia Jewish life in Ethiopia and Kenya V/2/13</p><p>Europe--General Book review: In Search of Your European Roots II/1/32 In pursuit of Zionist ancestors VII/1/13 Synagogue art research in Europe VII/2/11 Survey of Jewish sites in Europe planned VII/2/14 Clarifies Karolines IX/3/66 Book review: A Travel Guide to Jewish Europe IX/4/68 Book review: Jewish Heritage Travel: A Guide of Central and Eastern Europe IX/4/68 Discovered: An 1839 travelogue through the Jewish world X/3/18 Book Review: In Search of Your European Roots XI/1/66 Age overstatement among European Jews XI/2/30 Post-Paris seminar field trips to be coordinated XII/1/42 Mandated family names in Central Europe XII/2/34 Post-Seminar field trips to Eastern Europe after Paris conference win support of head archivists XII/2/52 To Paris and beyond: July 1997 XII/3/30 Information about post-Paris trips XII/4/33 Central and East European Map Collections and Related Information at the U.S. Library of Congress XVII/2/23 European Jewish Genealogical Societies Form Their Own Federation XV/1/66 Plan to Study Ancestry of the Ashkenazim XV/4/66 The Influence of Migrants from Czech Lands on Jewish Communities in Central and Eastern Europe XVI/2/19 European Emigration and Its Mark on Genealogical Research XVI/4/6 The Evolution of Ashkenazic Given Names: Some General Aspects XVII/1/18 Ashkenazic European Names: Databases for European and Foreign Countries XVII/1/47 Patterns of Late 19th- and Early 20th-Century Migration and Transmigration from Europe XVII/3/35 Book Review: Historical Atlas of Central Europe XXI/2/64</p><p>Finland A Bit of Finnish-Jewish History XIII/3/66</p><p>France Sources in Paris, Jews of Metz I/2/11 How to trace your Alsatian roots I/2/28 Papal Jews, Jews of North Africa, Metz II/1/26 Jews of Metz II/2/16 Jews of Paris--a bibliographic history II/2/18 Jewish sections and cemeteries in Paris during 19th century II/3/24 Jews in Metz before 1792 II/3/25 Family genealogies, California Jews III/1/24 Departmental archive at Seine-et-Marne III/2/22 Municipal archives in Strasbourg III/2/23 Sources for Jewish genealogy in Moselle region IV/1/21 How to trace your French roots--regional analysis IV/1/22 Jews of Sultz in the 17th century IV/2/21 My ancestors from Metz IV/2/22 Books on fate of French Jews during Holocaust IV/3/18 Sources in Bordeaux-Bayonne area IV/3/20 Dictionary of Bordelais Jewry IV/3/20 Jews of Fontainebleau, Arles and Denmark V/1/16 Luneville, book to be published V/2/27 Marriage contracts of Moselle V/4/23 Jews of Nice VI/1/30 Parisian libraries holding genealogical material VI/1/30 Colloquium of the JHS of Alsace-Lorraine VI/3/23 Census of Jews of Besancon VII/1/27 Jews of Lyon VII/1/27 Sources from Provence-Cote d'Azur VII/3/29 Name adoptions from Colmar VII/4/59 Jews of Marseille VII/4/60 Judeo-Portuguese communities in southwest France VIII/1/28 Holdings of Municipal Archives in Marseille VIII/2/37 An index to the 1784 census of the Jews of Alsace VIII/3/21 List of surnames adopted in 1808 VIII/3/51 Books of genealogical significance VIII/4/54 Microfilms about Jews of Lorraine at LDS Library VIII/4/55 Identifying Alsatian towns IX/1/39 Book on deportation of the Jews from the Marseille region IX/1/39 Lists of name adoptions from 1808 IX/2/48 Records available on immigrants to France records at diplomatic archives IX/3/50 Publication of guide to French-Jewish genealogy IX/4/52 County of Venaissin IX/4/52 Deportations from France IX/4/53 Name adoption registers IX/4/53 How to find French naturalization records X/1/46 French Commission on Jewish Archives X/1/47 Society of the History of the Jews of Alsace-Lorraine X/1/47 Jewish names in the light of Napoleon's Decree of July 20, 1808 X/2/31 Jewish genealogical research in Alsace X/2/31 Name adoptions in Bas Rhin X/2/51 Adoption and declaration of names by Jews in France in 1808 X/4/52 Formation of special interest groups X/4/64 Bayonne Jewish Name Adoption Decree of 1808 X/4/64 Book on Alsatian name changes in 1808 XI/1/48 Documenting French cemeteries XI/2/47 Catalogue of French genealogical society's library and archives holdings XI/2/47 Form Cultural Association of Papal Jews XI/4/75 Using French naturalization papers and consular records XII/1/41 Alsace bibliography available. XII/1/45 Papal Jews XII/2/43 Use of French naturalization documents XII/4/11 Selected resources for French genealogy XII/4/13 Jewish Cemeteries in Paris XIII/1/12 Basic Genealogical Research in France XIII/1/13 Changes in Access to French Naturalization Documents XIII/1/15 Emigration from Alsace-Lorraine XIII/1/16 Cemetery project XIII/1/39 Address for French military records XIII/2/50 Data on French Jews killed during World War I XIII/2/50 19th century surname adoptions in Paris XIII/3/49 Jewish Memories in Alsace: Marriage Contracts of the 18th Century XIII/3/63 Alsace-Lorraine XIV/1/46 Cemetery indexing project XIV/1/46 Genealogy of Saul Wahl XIV/1/46 Alsatian marriage lists XIV/3/69 Regional chapters of the French genealogical society XIV/3/69 Alsatian genealogy XIV/4/69 Mobility of Jewish Families from Alsace-Lorraine at the End of the 19th Centur XV/2/29 A Brief History of the Jews of Alsace XV/2/29 Non-Jewish Genealogical Associations and Seminars in France: Why the Cercle de Généalogie Juive Participates in Their Activities XV/3/14 Book Review: Nous Sommes 900 Francais XV/4/61 19th-century Parisian Life XIX/3/52 Indexing Project for French Vital Records XIX/3/52 Jewish Daily Life in Moselle Region XIX/3/52 Jewish Soldiers in Napoleon's Army XIX/3/52 Death Records of Deported Jews XIX/4/68 Jews in Napoleon's Army XIX/4/68 Emigration to Brazil XX/1/47 Non-Jewish Levys XX/1/47 Plobsheim Surname Adoptions XX/2/50 Success Using French Genealogical Society X/2/70 Wattwiler Jews XX/2/50 1809-10 census of Paris XX/3/47 Anti-Semitism during World War II XX/3/47 Death records of Holocaust victims XX/3/47 Immigrants to/through France XX/4/62 Jews of Einville XXI/1/47 Jews of Constantine XXI/1/47 Jews of Einville XXI/3/52</p><p>Galicia (see also Poland and Ukraine) About Galicia II/3/18 A research trip to Galicia II/3/19 Sources of information about Galicia V/3/22 Location of western Galicia vital statistic records VII/2/14 The Kollel Galicia Archive (in Jerusalem) VII/3/23 More on location of Galician records VII/3/43 Vital statistic records for eastern Galicia now in Warsaw archives VIII/2/11 Demographic records of Galicia, 1772-1919 VIII/2/07 Work continues on Encyclopedia of Galician Rabbis and Scholars VIII/4/65 Special interest group planned for Galitzianers IX/2/65 A Galician success story X/1/40 Vom Shtetl an Die Lower East Side: Galizische Juden in New York XI/1/65 A Return to Galicia: Shtetl Life at the turn of the twenty-first century XI/4/46 Some Discoveries in Galician Records XIII/4/45 Finding Your Jewish Roots in Galicia: A Resource Guide XIV/3/87 Little-known Rabbis in Small Galician Towns XIX/1/47 Jewish Surnames in Russia, Poland, Galicia and Prussia XIX/3/28</p><p>General Archival publications (List of Jewish archives worldwide) I/1/07 Suggestions if planning to visit European Jewish cemeteries II/2/20 AVOTAYNU travel file planned II/3/34 Our 1,048,576 ancestors IV/1/37 Comments on AVOTAYNU articles (family and place names) V/1/03 Tracing Jewish ancestors--a pioneer looks back V/3/03 Book review: Family Diseases: Are You At Risk? V/3/34 AVOTAYNU to publish gazetteer of Eastern Europe V/3/38 Seeking descendants of the Baal Shem Tov V/4/22 UN War Crimes Files are genealogical source V/4/23 Genealogy and electronic bulletin boards VI/1/13 Jewish Genealogical Family Finder used to try to save a life VI/1/14Supp Proposed standard numbering system for individuals, generations and charts in Jewish genealogy VI/3/03 No one can do my research as I can! VI/3/06 Improvements made to Family Finder VI/3/37 Disputes king-for-a-day legend VI/3/38 Gazetteer of Eastern Europe nearing completion VI/4/13 Landslayt groups as a complement to Jewish genealogical societies VI/4/14 Genealogical networking VI/4/16 Biography of Jewish genealogy VII/1/22 Jewish genealogical societies worldwide VII/1/31 Plans for Jewish Genealogical People Finder VII/3/03 Concludes a generation equals 24 years VII/3/45 Jewish Travel Guide 1991 VII/3/47 Sources for study of the urban Jewish immigrant experience VII/4/55 Microfiche now available through AVOTAYNU VII/4/57 Jewish Genealogical Family Finder marks tenth anniversary VIII/1/42 Jewish Genealogical People Finder acquires 50,000 entries VIII/1/50 Comments on naming convention VIII/2/56 WOWW wins awards VIII/2/59 JGPF adds new capabilities VIII/3/59 WOWW is wow! VIII/3/66 Using an independent research service: costly results VIII/4/49 Using an independent research service: FAST works VIII/4/50 Suggests alternate codes for Jewish months VIII/4/64 Pioneer praises publication (AVOTAYNU) VIII/4/66 AVOTAYNU to publish summaries of family books IX/2/54 Dictionary of Jewish Surnames in the Russian Empire has secondary benefits IX/2/66 What's in a date? A study of various calendars IX/3/24 Lists IX/4/21 Family books in print IX/4/63 Book review: The Jewish Travel Guide IX/4/68 Mormons baptize Holocaust victims X/1/11 Plan screening program for Canavan disease X/1/64 Using a rare mutation to find a relative X/2/37 Some additional uses for A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from the Russian Empire X/3/09 Some comments on Beider's dictionary X/3/11 Book review: From Generation to Generation X/3/59 Consanguinity or the relationship of "removed" cousins X/4/37 New family books in print X/4/73 Guest Editorial: A Call to Arms XI/1/03 The Search for ??ialundzie: Locating hard-to-find-places XI/1/17 Archival research basics for beginning genealogists, Part I: Microfilm XI/1/23 Bar-Zev answers (on consanguinity) XI/1/35 Consanguinity revisited XI/1/35 Names and their origins XI/1/41 Suggested behavior code for genealogists XI/1/45 Two surnames may be calques XI/1/67 The Mormon/Jewish controversy: What really happened XI/2/03 The problems with names XI/2/23 What a genealogist can learn from hospital records XI/2/37 Genealogy in its historical context XI/2/41 Book review: The Jewish Traveler: Hadassah Magazine's Guide to the World's Jewish Communities and Sights XI/2/63 Book review: Eat and Be Satisfied, A Social History of Jewish Food XI/2/63 Book review: Yiddish Cuisine: A Gourmet's Approach to Jewish Cooking XI/2/63 Book review: Who's Who in My Family XI/2/63 Lawrence Tapper Is Right: A Case Study--Trying to Save a Cemetery XI/2/66 Comments on Tapper's "A Call to Arms" XI/2/66 Re: Lawrence Tapper's Editorial: Genealogy Can Connect Individuals to Their Community of the Past and Present XI/2/67 Genealogy as a Spiritual Pilgrimage XI/3/16 Enigmas and Idiosyncrasies XI/3/24 Fifteenth Summer Seminar on Jewish Genealogy XI/3/43 An Adventure with the Saints XI/3/47 Expanding the Universe of Jewish Archival Treasures XI/3/82 Jewish Genealogical Societies and Special Interest Groups XII/1/54 Indexing and record acquisition projects abound XII/1/61 A Daitch-Mokotoff soundex approach to misspelled names XII/2/13 Genealogists can't count XII/2/26 Call for human interest stories and family books in print XII/2/30 Genetics and Jewish law XII/2/38 Former YIVO librarian lauds genealogy XII/2/65 Gorr book lacks Sephardic variants XII/2/66 Genealogical word lists available XII/2/67 Learning about Jewish immigrant women: fact and fiction XII/3/24 A Call to Arms--continued XII/3/40 FAST needs help XII/3/75 CJSI To Be Updated and Expanded XIV/2/17 19th Annual Seminar on Jewish Genealogy and the 21st Century Coming Soon to New York! XIV/3/40 A Small Piece on the Evolution of Given Names XIII/2/14 AJGS Announces Plans for a Family Tree of the Jewish People XIII/4/3 AJGS, Beth Hatefutsoth, and JewishGen Plan Cooperative Venture to Share Family Tree Data XIV/1/3 Avotaynu Declares Jewish Genealogy Month XIV/4/3 Avotaynu Foundation Formed XIII/2/26 AVOTAYNU Editors to Head B'nai Brith Genealogy Effort XIV/4/3 Back Issues of AVOTAYNU Now Available on CD-ROM XIII/2/27 Before You Hire a Researcher XIII/2/18 How and Why I Created a Shtetl Map XIII/2/34 How to Organize a Shtetl Co-op XIV/1/13 Jewish Culture, History, and Religion: Keys to Understanding Our Ancestors' Lives and to Asking the Right Questions XIV/1/4 Jewish Genealogical Societies and Special Interest Groups XIII/1/55 Jewish Genealogical Societies and Special Interest Groups XIV/1/54 Jewish Genealogy on the Eve of the 21st Century XIII/3/3 L.A. Seminar Attracts 800 Attendees XIV/3/18 Look to the Future and Start a Jewish Genealogical Society to Find the Past XIII/3/39 New Family Books in Print XIII/4/91 New Family Histories in Print XIV/4/87 Organized Jewish Genealogy: The Early Years XIII/1/3 Paul Jacobi (1911-1997) XIII/3/9 Shtetl-Based Jewish Genealogical Research XIV/1/9 Star-Studded Cast of Speakers Assembled for Los Angeles Seminar XIV/1/18 The Mysteries of Yiddish Given Names XIII/2/17 Two Scholarly Journals XIV/4/73 University Research Libraries: An Underutilized Genealogical Resource XIII/1/20 Verifying Oral Traditions, A Case Study: The Gaon of Vilna XIII/3/29 Paris Seminar to Feature Distinguished Speakers XIII/1/17 Hello, Cousin: The Mathematics of Ancestry XIII/1/34 Books on Jewish History XIII/1/38 When Is a Name Nothing More Than a Variant of Another Name XIII/1/49 FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions About Jewish Genealogy XIII/1/64 Books About Towns XIII/2/63 Bremen Emigration Lists Found XIII/3/11 Report on the Seminar in Paris XIII/3/11 Top 10 Reasons to Attend the 18th Annual Seminar on Jewish Genealogy in Los Angeles XIII/4/4 Databases Abound on JewishGen XIV/1/15 Gleanings from the Los Angeles Seminar XIV/3/19 Breaking Through the Brick Wall XIV/3/3 Special Supplement: A Beginner's Primer in U.S. Jewish Genealogical Research XIV/3/43 Proceedings of the 5th International Seminar on Jewish Genealogy XIV/3/87 Emigration from the Port of Hamburg, Germany XIV/4/19 1998 Cemetery Project on CD-ROM XIV/4/85 A Genealogist's Guide to Discovering Your Female Ancestors XIV/4/85 These Are the Names: Studies in Jewish Onomastics XIV/4/85 The Family Tree of the Jewish People--One Year Later XV/1/27 AVOTAYNU Launches Internet Magazine for Jewish Genealogy XV/4/43 Jewish Genealogy Month 5760 XV/4/66 Nu? What's New? Attracts 3,000 XVI/1/42 Editorial: Genealogists Must Lobby for Open Access to Archives XVI/2/3 Personal Privacy as an Issue in Access to Historical Research Material XVI/2/5 Some Ethical Questions Raised by Genealogy XVI/2/9 Project Brings Genealogy into the Jewish Schools of Toronto XVI/3/42 Comments on Privacy Issue XVI/3/67 Jewish Genealogical Projects in Progress XVII/1/23 Avotaynu Wants Surname Databases XVII/1/34 Jewish Genealogy in the First Decade of the 21st Century XVII/4/3 Jewish Genealogy Projects in Progress XVII/4/76 Avotaynu Guide to Jewish Genealogy Planned for 2003 XVIII/3/37 Genealogist's Wish List XIX/1/23 New Book: Avotaynu Guide to Jewish Genealogy XIX/1/14 The Future of JewishGen: From the Person Who Helped Make It Happen XIX/1/07 The Future of JewishGen: The Museum's Perspective XIX/1/05 Two Approaches in Jewish Onomastics: Books by Menk and the General: The Future of JewishGen: JewishGen's Perspective XIX/1/03 Urges Using Red Cross XIX/1/67 A Better Way to Record Locations for Genealogy XIX/2/19 Book Review: What's Behind a Name XIX/2/66 Descendants of King David XIX/2/54 Unclaimed Property Throughout the World XIX/2/54 Book Review: The Lost Tribes of Israel: The History of a Myth XIX/3/65 How to Publish a Family Tree on CD XIX/3/52 Genealogy and Social Structure: A New Course XIX/4/11 IAJGS Awards Reach for Greater Heights XIX/4/25 International Institute of Jewish Genealogy Formed XIX/4/05 K. G. Saur International Biographical Archives Series XIX/4/35 A One-Step Portal for Online Jewish Genealogy XX/1/03 Preserving Tape Recordings XX/1/47 The Small World of Jewish Genealogy XX/1/42 Ohel Not Identical to Mausoleum X X/2/70 Ancestry.com Offers Many Services and Products XX/2/21 Jewish Genealogy: The Past 25 Years XX/2/03 The Future of Jewish Genealogy XX/2/09 The Importance of Establishing a Family Genealogy Website XX/2/11 Pioneer Reminisces About Past 25 Years XX/3/67 The Next Step: Jewish Genealogy Goes Academic XX/3/03 eJewish.info Is Innovative Tool for Genealogical Research XXI/1/17 The State of Organized Jewish Genealogy XXI/1/28 Building a Family History Website XXI/2/24 Jewish Newspapers as a Genealogical Resource XXI/2/27 New Printing Technique is Boon for Genealogists XXI/2/13 Who Is a Jew?--and Related Topics XXI/2/32 Creates Family Tree Registry XXI/3/67 Fate of the Ten Lost Tribes XXI/3/67 The Role of Genealogy in the Jewish Community XXI/3/03</p><p>Germany Adoption of family names in Prussia (1804) I/2/23 German-Jewish Records at the Genealogical Society of Utah III/1/03 Gedenkbuch, list of 130,000 German Jews persecuted by Nazis III/1/24 Jews of Gleiwitz III/3/21 Availability of German maps circa 1888 IV/2/17 Wedding records in Berlin 1723-1813 IV/2/21 Condition of German Jewish cemeteries V/1/34 Availability of German-Jewish records V/2/12 More on condition of German Jewish cemeteries V/2/26 German-Jewish periodicals: A genealogical resource V/3/20 Book review: Jewish Community of Frankfurt V/3/34 East German Jewish archive to open by 1994 V/3/38 Jews of Blomberg V/4/15 Jewish records in East Germany VI/1/03 Plea to index Weissensee Cemetery VI/1/29 Jewish genealogical research in the German Democratic Republic VI/2/06 Hamburg records aid genealogists VI/2/30 German cemeteries documented VI/2/39 German-Jewish records in the Mormon library VI/3/04 Jews of Baden-W�rttemberg VII/1/28 History of personal records of Jews in Germany VII/2/09 Lesser known records...in the Hamburg State Archives VII/3/06 U.S. National Archives material on Jews from Bavaria and Bremen VII/3/16 Book review: Gedenkbuch VII/3/36 Jewish records held in Leipzig Archives VII/4/28 The Sephardim of the Altona Cemetery VIII/1/14 Comparing most common German-Jewish surnames with their American counterparts VIII/1/30 East German genealogical records VIII/1/32 Twenty miles of Prussia archives VIII/1/33 Jewish Community Office in Leipzig has valuable records VIII/1/34 More Jewish holdings in East German archives VIII/2/13 Leipzig office has 1936 census (of Jews) VIII/2/55 Additional German resources given VIII/2/55 Translating Judeo-German VIII/3/28 Books and periodicals from Germany VIII/3/35 Book review: Address book for Germanic Genealogy VIII/3/62 Mormons have microfilmed 1938 German-Jewish census VIII/3/65 Germany yields finds from other European countries IX/1/27 The Complete Archives of the German Jews IX/1/28 How the Jewish cemeteries of Altona survived World War II IX/1/33 Nazi publication documents "Jews and Non-Aryans With Musical Abilities" IX/1/34 Determining an ancestral town in Germany IX/2/19 The families of Jewish private bankers Reflections on a genealogical study IX/2/40 Jewish genealogical society formed IX/2/49 Germany's finds from Eastern Europe IX/3/03 DP card file at the Central Archives in Heidelberg IX/3/13 Books document Jews in German communities IX/3/21 Book review: Bibliography of Projects on German Jewry and anti-Semitism IX/3/61 Book review: Bibliography of German-Jewish Genealogy IX/3/61 Reports on German emigration societies IX/3/65 Book review: Jews of Germany: A Historical Portrait . X/1/63 German laws regulating access to genealogical records X/2/25 Hamburg shipping X/2/53 German Emigration Society records available X/2/67 Book review: Inventory of Emigration Sources in the Bremen Archives X/3/62 Book review: Family Research for Jewish Ancestors from Baden Wurttemberg in Hohenlohe District X/3/63 Describes Jewish history periodical of the Rhineland-Palatinate X/3/67 Conversions and mixed marriages in Germany X/4/58 Reports on documentation of Jewish tombstones in Baden W�rttemberg X/4/81 Book lists persons who lost German citizenship, 1933-1945 X/4/81 The G\1 Collection in Jerusalem's Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People XI/4/25 Brilling archives in Frankfurt museum XI/1/34 History and Culture of the Jews in Swabia XI/1/64 Jewish first names in German Alemanic districts XI/2/48 Germanic Genealogy: A Guide to Worldwide Sources and Migration Patterns XI/3/79 The 1939 census of the Jews of Germany XII/2/31 Hamburg JGS founded XII/2/66 On-Site research in Germany XII/3/12 Searching the German catalog XII/3/45 Founding of a German-Jewish genealogical society XII/3/54 Book review: Cologne Gedenkbuch XII/3/71 Microfilmed German records XII/4/15 Hamburg Jewry XII/4/65 Civil Vital Records for Berlin Jews Discovered in the Potsdam Archives German and Polish Place Names XIV/2/33 Alternate index to Hamburg emigrations XIII/1/39 Book on Jews of Posen XIII/1/64 Additional German Records Found XIII/1/67 Major change is acquisition policy for German records XIII/2/50 Taschenbuch f�r Familiengeschichtsforschung XIII/3/63 Genealogical Research in W�rttemberg, Germany XIII/4/29 Researching Famous or Near-Famous German Ancestors? XIII/4/98 Literary Sources for Genealogical Research on Jews with German Roots XIV/1/31 More About W�rttemberg Census XIV/1/67 Jewish Family Name Adoption in Mecklenburg XIV/2/35 Cemeteries and birth and death registers of Hamburg. XIV/2/47 German-Jewish family names XIV/2/47 News of Baden-W�rttemberg Cemeteries XIV/2/65 Palatinate name adoptions XIV/3/69 Library Resources for German-Jewish Genealogy XIV/3/87 Emigration from the Port of Hamburg, Germany XIV/4/19 Westphalian Jews and the Holocaust: An Amazing Find XV/1/31 Records for West Prussia Found in East German Archives XV/1/33 German-Jewish Gravestones on the Internet XV/1/66 Hamburg Emigration Lists Are Being Computerized XV/2/3 Primary Source Material for German-Jewish Genealogy at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People XV/2/31 Resources Relating to the History of the Jews in the Archives of the Former German Democratic Republic (East Germany) XV/3/23 Clarifies Location of German List XVI/1/67 German Name Adoptions XVI/2/43 Report on Brilling Collection in Frankfurt XVI/3/54 Searching for Louis Kirchner in the Hamburg Emigration Lists XVI/4/9 German Microfilms Prove Valuable XVI/4/29 Jews of Baden-Wuerttemberg Project XVI/4/89 Eastern European Jewish Emigration via Hamburg XVII/2/11 Book Review: The History of the Jews of Germany in Modern Times XVII/2/63 German and Polish Archival Holdings in Moscow XVII/4/11 How to Determine from Where and When an American Moved to Berlin XVII/4/20 Navigating Berlin Resources to Solve a Family Puzzle XVIII/2/29 Book Review Portraits of Our Past: Jews of the German Countryside XVIII/3/62 Updated Website for Berlin City Directories XVIII/4/91 Westphalian Jews and the Holocaust: An Amazing Find XV/1/31 Records for West Prussia Found in East German Archives XV/1/33 German-Jewish Gravestones on the Internet XV/1/66 Hamburg Emigration Lists Are Being Computerized XV/2/3 Primary Source Material for German-Jewish Genealogy at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People XV/2/31 Resources Relating to the History of the Jews in the Archives of the Former German Democratic Republic (East Germany) XV/3/23 Clarifies Location of German List XVI/1/67 German Name Adoptions XVI/2/43 Report on Brilling Collection in Frankfurt XVI/3/54 Searching for Louis Kirchner in the Hamburg Emigration Lists XVI/4/9 German Microfilms Prove Valuable XVI/4/29 Jews of Baden-Wuerttemberg Project XVI/4/89 Eastern European Jewish Emigration via Hamburg XVII/2/11 Book Review: <I>The History of the Jews of Germany in Modern Times</I> XVII/2/63 German and Polish Archival Holdings in Moscow XVII/4/11 How to Determine from Where and When an American Moved to Berlin XVII/4/20 Navigating Berlin Resources to Solve a Family Puzzle XVIII/2/29 Book Review Portraits of Our Past: Jews of the German Countryside XVIII/3/62 Updated Website for Berlin City Directories XVIII/4/91 Frankfurt/Main Jewry XIX/1/47 More Than a Book Review: Gedächtnis aus Stein: Die Synagoge in Kippenheim, 1852-2002 XIX/1/34 New Site for Berlin City Directories XIX/1/67 Sources for Jewish Family Research in the Hamburg State Archives XIX/1/47 My Ancestors Were Schutzjuden XIX/2/11 Jewish Surnames in Russia, Poland, Galicia and Prussia XIX/3/28 Sielemann Given Obermayer Award XIX/3/54 Book Review: Genealogical Guide to East and West Prussia XIX/4/75 Cites Sources of German, Austrian and Czech Holocaust Victims Names XIX/4/79 Book Review: Legacy: The Saga of a German-Jewish Family Across Time and Circumstance XX/1/56 Book Review: The Diaries of Bernhard Cahn: A Man of His Time XX/1/56 Sephardic community of Hamburg XX/1/47 Sources on Jews of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Nearby Areas XX/1/41 Jewish Genealogy in Germany XX/2/26 German Jewish Migration to South Africa XX/3/25 German Areas Bordering Switzerland XX/4/62 A Short History of Jewish Surnames in Germany XXI/1/05 Jacobi Center Acquires German Genealogies XXI/1/62 Book Review: A Dictionary of German-Jewish Surnames XXI/2/64</p><p>Gibraltar Toledano family of Gibraltar XXI/3/52</p><p>Greece Bibliography of Greek Jewry VIII/2/40 Greek Jewry VIII/4/56 Greek Jewish records in Moscow to be returned to Greece IX/3/52 Greek Jewry: Sources for genealogical research X/4/11 Projects to Document Jews of Turkey, Salonika, Bulgaria, and Belgrade XIV/2/40 How to Research Families from Turkey and Salonika XIV/1/28 Finding Relatives for a Survivor from Rhodes XVI/4/63 Finding Relatives for a Survivor from Rhodes XVI/4/63 Book Review: Memorial to the Jews Deported from Greece XXI/2/54</p><p>Holland Origin of Dutch surnames III/2/30 Sources of information in Holland III/3/22 Sources of information in Holland IV/1/23 Jewish Historical Museum publishes booklet on Dutch-Jewish history IV/2/20 List of marriages of Portuguese-Jewish community in Amsterdam 1650-1911 IV/3/21 Jewish archival holdings V/1/16 Record keeping in Holland from 1811 V/2/17 Genealogical research in the Netherlands V/2/18 Marriage index 1550-1811 planned V/3/25 Documenting the cemetery of Scheveningseweg VI/1/30 Genealogical sources at the Institute for Dutch Jewry in Jerusalem VI/1/31 Given name changes in Dutch documents VI/2/27 Dutch publications of genealogical interest VI/3/24 Amsterdam sources for Jewish genealogical research VI/3/24 Jewish community of Amersfoort VII/2/26 Jewish community of Alkmaar VII/2/27 Jewish holdings in Municipal Archives of The Hague VII/3/29 Books available from Dutch Jewish genealogical society VII/3/29 Jews of Aalten VII/3/30 Jews of Gennep VII/3/30 Amsterdam--Jerusalem of the West VII/4/17 Records of the Jews of Rotterdam VII/4/60 List of Jews of Friesland in 1749 VII/4/61 Marriages in Mokum. reviewed VIII/2/38 Amersfoort circumcision register VIII/2/39 Emigration lists of Holland-American Line VIII/4/57 Jewish genealogical books for sale IX/1/40 Dutch-Jewish cemeteries IX/1/40 Filling in the blanks in Dutch-Jewish genealogy IX/2/28 Lists of Jews in Oldambtand, Hoogeveen and Surinam IX/2/49 Correction on availability of book on marriages IX/3/52 Wimple tradition IX/4/53 Tombstones of Overijssel province IX/4/54 Name adoption book, marriage register book IX/4/54 Burial register of Muiderberg IX/4/54 Memorial book project of Dutch Holocaust victims X/1/47 Amsterdam's Municipal Archive as a source for Genealogical Research, 1812-1945) X/1/47 Using the Index to the Jewish Marriages of Amsterdam from 1650-1911 to create family trees X/2/39 Book review: Marriages in Amsterdam X/2/60 Jewish community of Eindhoven X/3/44 Amsterdam Municipal Archives--Department of Military Affairs X/3/44 Dutch book price changes X/4/83 Holland-America line passenger lists on microfiche X/4/83 Dutch estate tax registers as sources for genealogical research XI/1/46 Index of Ashkenazic marriages 1723-1811 in Holland XI/1/46 Dutch JGS offers numerous publications XI/1/49 Books on Dutch Jewry XI/2/46 Trips to Ukraine and Holland XII/1/39 Book review: De Geschiedenis van het Joodse Geslacht Schuit XII/2/63 Dutch-Jewish names under French rule (1810-15) XII/3/55 Jews of Drente XII/3/55 Sephardic fraternity "Santa Companhia de dotar orfas e donzelas," XII/3/55 Dutch Jews on the fringes of society XII/4/63 Mohels in Amsterdam XIII/1/39 Books on Jewish life in Noord-Brabant and Groningen XIII/2/50 Jewish First Names in Amsterdam XIII/2/63 New Resources for Jewish Genealogy in the Netherlands XIII/4/21 Dutch Holocaust records at the General Archives XIV/1/46 Jews of Ootmarsum XIV/1/46 Jews of Leeuward and Zeeland XIV/1/46 Naming patterns in the 17th and 18th centuries XIV/1/46 Books on cemeteries in Amsterdam XIV/2/47 Jewish presence in Holland for past 400 years XIV/2/47 Jews of Drenthe province XIV/2/47 Dutch-Jewish newspapers XIV/3/69 Holocaust-related records at the General Government Archive XIV/4/69 Jewish history of Groningen. XIV/4/69 Dutch-Jewish Genealogical Data Base Established XVI/3/67 Reports Dutch-Jewish Genealogical Database XVII/3/67 Book Review: Jewish Surnames in Amsterdam, 1669-1850 XVIII/2/61 Jewish Schools in Amsterdam XX/3/47 Dutch Privacy Laws XIX/1/47 Migrations from Eastern Europe to the Netherlands and Belgium XIX/2/29 Jewish and Dutch Family Law XIX/3/52 Papers Given at Dutch/Belgian Jewish Conference XIX/3/52 Burial Books of Ashkenazic Jews of Amsterdam, 1872-1935 XX/3/32 Genealogy Material at Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana XX/3/47 Hague Jewish Archives Returned from Moscow XX/3/47 Jewish orphanage at The Hague during the Holocaust XX/3/47 Relationships Among Some Early Jewish Settlers in Dutch Friesland XX/3/37 Digital Monument of Jewish Communities in The Netherlands XXI/2/43 Jewish School Children in Amsterdam XXI/2/43 Jews of Amersfoort XXI/2/43 Organized Jewish Genealogical Research in The Netherlands XXI/3/15</p><p>Holocaust Holocaust survivors of Belgium II/1/23 Migration of Belgian Holocaust survivors III/1/21 Gedenkbuch, list of 130,000 German Jews persecuted by Nazis III/1/24 Accounting of Belgian Jews after Holocaust IV/2/17 Books on fate of French Jews during Holocaust IV/3/18 Holocaust material at the American Jewish Archives V/4/08 Holocaust works V/4/21 New Belgian books on the Holocaust VI/2/25 Biography of Sephardic Jews and the Holocaust VII/2/17 Book review: Gedenkbuch VII/3/36 Provides Gedenkbuch information VII/3/46 Group to document all Hungarian Holocaust victims VIII/1/37 Mormons have microfilmed 1938 German-Jewish census VIII/3/65 U.S. Holocaust Museum Archives and Library to open April 23 IX/1/03 Nazi publication documents "Jews and Non-Aryans With Musical Abilities" IX/1/34 Book on deportation of the Jews from the Marseille region IX/1/39 The Valley of the Destroyed Communities IX/2/38 New sources at the U.S. Holocaust Museum archives IX/3/07 Database of names at Holocaust Museum IX/4/17 Romanian records at the Holocaust Memorial Museum; research strategies for records still held in Romania IX/4/18 Deportations from France IX/4/53 Yad Vashem Archives IX/4/71 Joint Distribution Committee records IX/4/71 International Tracing Service records at Yad Vashem X/1/22 Memorial book project of Dutch Holocaust victims X/1/47 Consular records in Shanghai about Jewish refugees X/2/23 New sources at the U.S. Holocaust Museum X/2/47 Austrian Holocaust project planned X/2/66 Hoover Institution has Shanghai consular records X/2/67 U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum as a genealogical resource X/3/28 Theresienstadt ghetto X/3/43 Looking for Bergen-Belsen data X/4/80 Book lists persons who lost German citizenship, 1933-1945 X/4/81 Plans to develop yizkor book database X/4/82 Lodz ghetto and cemetery lists XI/1/24 Ask for donation of yizkor book translations to Holocaust Museum XI/1/67 Fifth volume of Lodz ghetto book published XI/3/67 Theresienstadt Association XI/3/67 Book review: How to Document Victims and Locate Survivors of the Holocaust XI/3/78 Book review: Death Books from Auschwitz Remnants XI/3/81 Kindertransporte Cards Located XI/3/83 Holocaust-Related Information XI/4/26 Records of Hidden children of Poland XI/4/55 Book review: Gedenkbuch Berlins der Judischen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus XI/4/74 Book review: Hamburger Judische Opfer des Nationalsozialismus: Gedenkbuch XI/4/74 Lodz Ghetto Database Now at USHMM XI/3/83 The 1939 census of the Jews of Germany XII/2/31 Moscow' Osobyi Archives: A new genealogical source at U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum XII/2/37 Book review: In Memoriam XII/3/71 Book review: ColognBook review: e Gedenkbuch XII/3/71 Arolsen record finding aid created XII/3/74 Holocaust Hidden Child searching for my biological family XII/3/75 Book review: Bohemia and Moravia Deportations: Terezin Memorial Book XII/4/81 A Forgotten Publication Listing Holocaust Survivors XIV/2/15 Are the Heirless of the Holocaust Era Really Without Heirs? How Genealogists Can Help XIV/2/9 Death List from Gross Rosen Published by Polish Archives Jewish Genealogists Gear Up to Help Identify Heirs to Assets of Holocaust Victims XIV/2/3 List of More than 300,000 Polish Holocaust Survivors Received by USHMM In Washington, DC Swiss Banks and the Name Lists XIV/2/4 New Acquisitions at the USHMM XIII/1/23 Holocaust Record Access XIII/2/48 Stutthof Concentration Camp: A Major New Resource of Data, Valuable Yet Frustrating XIII/2/46 Swiss Records of Jewish Refugee During the Holocaust XIII/2/49 Director of Yad Vashem Archives Describes Plans for the Future XIII/3/66 Lw¢w Ghetto Records Being Indexed XIII/3/66 What Happened to Shmuel and Rebeka during the Holocaust XIII/4/22 Gross Rosen Death Lists XIV/1/34 "What Happened to Shmuel and Rebeka During the Holocaust: A Correction XIV/1/67 Information About the Jewish Claims Conference in Germany XIV/3/41 Yad Vashem Database Will Document All Jews Caught Up in the Holocaust XIV/4/4 Oswego, New York: Wartime Haven for Jewish Refugees XIV/4/46 German Family Holds Paintings of Jewish Artist XIV/4/68 Holocaust-related records at the General Government Archive of Holland XIV/4/69 Book Review: From A Ruined Garden: The Memorial Books of Polish Jewry XIV/4/85 Book Review: French Children of the Holocaust XV/1/64 Lest We Lose Their Names: Yad Vashem Opens Drive to Collect Missing Names for Hall of Names XV/1/3 Yad Vashem Mobilizes Army of Workers to Computerize Names of Holocaust Victims XV/1/7 Why Jewish Genealogists Should Participate in the Process to Restore Holocaust-Era Assets to Rightful Heirs XV/1/9 How To See Justice Done: Use Genealogists to Return Assets to Rightful Owners and Heirs XV/1/11 Remembering Lithuanian Shoah Victims: A Research Project XV/1/21 Family Trees Found in Yizkor Books XV/1/29 Jewish Genealogists Active in Efforts to Redeem Holocaust-Era Insurance Policies XV/2/21 International Tracing Service Digitizing Files XV/2/50 Book Review: Kaminits-Podolsk and Its Environs XV/2/65 Book Review: If I Forget Thee...: The Destruction of the Shtetl Butrimantz XV/2/65 Avotaynu Forms Partnership To Help Heirs of Holocaust Victims XV/3/21 Migration to Brazil During the Holocaust Period XV/3/29 The NAME SEARCH Database at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum XV/4/15 Documentation on Sephardic and Balkan Jewry at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and U.S. National Archives XV/4/20 Yad Vashem Still Needs Yizkor Books XV/4/66 Yad Vashem Opens Multimillion Name Database XVI/1/3 Yad Vashem Opens Combined Library and Archive Building XVI/1/4 Name Search Database at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum XVI/1/14 New Yizkor Books at Yad Vashem XVI/1/47 Yad Vashem Still Needs Yizkor Books XVI/2/49 Holocaust-era Asset Registers as a Source of Genealogical Information XVI/3/6 International Tracing Service: Mother Lode of Holocaust Information XVI/4/11 Dachau Records at the United States National Archives XVI/4/16 My Attempts to Settle with Generali XVI/4/17 Finding Relatives for a Survivor from Rhodes XVI/4/63 Status of Yad Vashem Database XVI/4/72 Book Review: The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of Jews and Gypsies Under the Antonescu Regime, 1940-1944 XVI/4/87 Using the Pages of Testimony Computerized Database XVII/1/15 Status of Holocaust-Era Insurance Claims, December 2000 XVII/1/41 Book Review: Frauen in den Aussenlagern des KZ Flossenbürg XVII/1/73 Urgent Need for New Pages of Testimony XVII/1/75 New Yizkor Books at Yad Vashem XVII/2/13 Working Toward a Master List of Holocaust Victims XVII/2/15 European Holocaust Memorial Institutions Plan Cooperation XVII/2/51 Where Did They Die? In Auschwitz? Or Did They Survive? XVII/3/22 Hungarian Archives Transfers Documents to Yad Vashem XVII/3/32 Museum of Deportation and Resistance in Mechelen (Malines), Belgium: Holdings and Activities XVII/4/14 Dachau List on CD-ROM XVII/4/54 Researching Holocaust Victims from a Single Town XVIII/1/35 Receives Settlement on 75-Year-Old Insurance Policy XVIII/2/67 Using the Red Cross to Learn about Holocaust Victims XVIII/3/19 Research Materials and Opportunities at the USHMM at 2003 Jewish Genealogy Conference XVIII/3/27 New Yizkor Books at Yad Vashem XVIII/3/49 New Yizkor Books at Yad Vashem XVIII/3/57 Book Review: The Holocaust in Lithuania 1941-1945: A Book of Remembrance XVIII/3/62 Remembering Holocaust Victims: The Challenge for Jewish Genealogists XVIII/4/22 Cites Source for List of Holocaust Victims XIX/3/67 Cites Sources of German, Austrian and Czech Holocaust Victims Names XIX/4/79 Finding Holocaust Survivors: It's Never Too Late XIX/4/44 Yad Vashem Central Database of Holocaust Victims' Names XX/1/49 Death records of Holocaust victims XX/3/47 European Refugees Who Found Shelter in Morocco During World War II XX/3/47 Yad Vashem Unveils Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names XX/3/05 Auschwitz Online Database XX/4/62 How to Find People Who Submitted Pages of Testimony at Yad Vashem XX/4/03 My Father Was Not an Orphan After All: Building a Family Tree After the Holocaust XX/4/46 Racing With Death: HIAS (HICEM) Lisbon Files (1940-45) XX/4/23 Book Review: Volumes on Hungarian Jewry during the Holocaust XXI/1/60 Escape Into Spain: Hispanic Way Station on the Road to Freedom XXI/1/23 New Acquisitions at U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum XXI/1/13 Book Review: Volumes on Hungarian Jewry during the Holocaust XXI/1/60 Seeks Holocaust Survivors Helped by Ecuadorian Consul in Stockholm XXI/1/62 Book Review: Memorial to the Jews Deported from Greece XXI/2/54 Book Review: Prisoner Deaths in Majdanek 1942 XXI/2/64 Holocaust Closure: The Role of Germany and the Swiss Red Cross XXI/2/03 Out of the Trap: HIAS French Files XXI/3/18 My Family's Connection to Schindler's List XIX/4/47</p><p>Hungary Jewish records in Hungarian archives III/2/13 Searching your Hungarian roots III/3/17 Hungarian-Jewish records at the Genealogical Society of Utah IV/1/11 Yiddish names for Hungarian towns IV/3/23 Questions Yiddish name for Hungarian towns V/2/27 Plans to document holdings of Hungarian Jewish Archives VI/3/25 Some problems of genealogical research in Hungary VII/3/17 Hungarian group publishes deportation list VII/3/44 Group to document all Hungarian Holocaust victims VIII/1/37 Books on Hungarian Jews planned VIII/2/15 Professional genealogist in Hungary VIII/2/40 A report on selected Hungarian Jewish cemeteries VIII/3/37 Recommendation for genealogical research firm VIII/4/56 Book review: Names of Jewish Victims of Hungarian Labor Battalions IX/1/62 Reports on visit to Budapest Jewish cemeteries IX/1/66 Bar Shaked plans to document all of Hungarian Jewry IX/2/03 SIG established for Hungarian-speaking regions IX/3/18 Cites where Hungarian book as available IX/3/67 Book review: Books on Hungary IX/4/69 Hungary cemetery data available IX/4/70 Hungarianization of Jewish surnames X/3/17 Two reports on Hungarian names project X/3/65 Provides information about Hungarian resources X/3/67 Given names and Hungarian Jews XI/2/24 Hungary's secret Jewish collection XII/2/36 Book review: The Jews of Hungary: History, Culture, Psychology XII/3/72 Jewish Records in Sopron, Hungary, Archives XIV/2/51 Variations and Changes in Hungarian-Jewish Names XIV/2/41 New Jewish Records of Hungary and Russia Available at the LDS Library XIII/1/51 Jews of northeastern Hungary XIII/2/50 What Hungarian Censuses Can Tell Us XIII/3/34 Resources for Jewish Genealogical Research in Hungary XIII/4/17 Turciansky Svaty Martin XIV/4/42 Records in the Israel Galilee XVI/1/48 Corrects Hungarian Article XVI/2/67 Researching Jewish Family History in Croatia, Slavonia and Hungary XVII/3/28 Hungarian Archives Transfers Documents to Yad Vashem XVII/3/32 18th-Century Jewish Censuses in Hungary XVIII/2/8 Book Review: Names of the Deported Jews from Zala County XVIII/3/62 Jewish Life in Eastern Hungary During the 18th Century XIX/3/34 Documents of the Hungarian Jewish Archives XIX/4/13 Book Review: Volumes on Hungarian Jewry during the Holocaust XXI/1/60</p><p>India Jews of India XI/3/66 Indian Jews--Bene Israel XII/1/43 Indian Jews XII/4/64</p><p>Iran Iranian-Jewish Genealogy XIV/1/51 Jadid Al-Islam: The Jewish "New Muslims" of Meshhed XIV/2/61</p><p>Iraq Sources of information V/1/35 Iraqi Jewry XII/4/65 Jewish Records Found in Baghdad XIX/2/03 The Jews of Iraq XIX/2/05 Baghdad Records Reach Israel XX/3/51</p><p>Ireland LDS Family History Library has Irish-Jewish records VII/3/47 Irish Alien Registrations XVII/2/66</p><p>Israel Tombstone inscriptions of cemetery at Mount of Olives I/1/13 Beth Hatefutsoth opens genealogy center I/2/03 Genealogical items at Jewish National and University Library I/2/12 Pinkassim Hakehillot (Encyclopedia of European communities) II/1/26 Recent acquisitions of various Israeli archives II/2/19 A genealogical trip--sources of information III/3/14 Montefiore census of Jews of Palestine in 1839 III/3/22 Dorot genealogy center seeks 1,000,000 names IV/2/15 Dorot Genealogy Center makes three major announcements IV/3/14 Central Archives for History of Jewish People publishes Polish holdings IV/3/22 Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People V/1/18 Dorot Center founder gives position paper V/3/13 Israel trip yields additional [genealogical] finds VI/1/09 Genealogical sources as the Institute for Dutch Jewry in Jerusalem VI/1/31 Encyclopedia of Galician Rabbis project needs financial help VI/1/42 Census of 1939 to be indexed VI/2/27 Their Father's House: Studies and Sources in Family History VI/3/26 Lauds efforts of Batya Untershatz VI/4/62 Dorot Center--a major disappointment VII/2/03 Guide to resources in Israel: an update VII/2/04 More resources in Israel VII/2/06 Beit Maramaros VII/2/15 Censuses from the Ottoman Empire VII/2/27 The Kollel Galicia Archive VII/3/23 Operation of Hall of Names (at Yad Vashem) VII/3/43 Dorot Center success story VII/4/61 AVOTAYNU contributes WOWW database to Yad Vashem VIII/2/15 The 19th-century Montefiore censuses VIII/2/25 Translator for Nefus registers found VIII/2/57 Two sources for research on British Palestine VIII/3/35 Update on resources in Israel IX/2/17 Bar-Ilan University establishes project for study of Jewish names and Jewish genealogy IX/2/37 The Valley of the Destroyed Communities IX/2/38 Sources for 1906-1920 Palestine period IX/2/50 Greek collection in Moscow IX/2/50 Key to the 1939 census of Palestine IX/2/50 Genealogically useful records at the Israel Labor Archives IX/3/17 The Jewish National and University Library--another Israeli resource IX/3/19 Three important archives in Israel IX/4/11 Yad Vashem Archives IX/4/71 Joint Distribution Committee records IX/4/71 Source for data on Russian immigrants to Israel at Ministry of Absorption IX/4/71 Burials in Israel IX/4/71 Records of Palestinian Jews who fought in World War I found IX/4/71 Research in Israel: Echoes from a vanished world X/1/19 New genealogy center opens in Tel Aviv X/1/22 Data available from Israeli sources X/1/22 International Tracing Service records at Yad Vashem X/1/22 Polish sources at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People X/2/21 Two genealogical resources at the Keren Kayemeth X/2/38 American consulate, Jerusalem 1857-1924 X/4/13 Institute for Hebrew Bibliography X/4/19 Research projects at the Diaspora Research Institute X/4/54 History of the Rapaport family X/4/65 Book review: American Consuls in the Holy Land, 1832-1914 X/4/76 The G\1 Collection in Jerusalem's Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People XI/4/25 Report on a Return Trip to Israel XI/4/21 A Guide to Jewish Genealogical Research in Israel XI/4/73 Diaspora Research Institute documenting Carpatho-Russian Jewry XII/1/66 No Yad Vashem distributor in the United States XII/1/67 Privacy laws XII/4/64 A Genealogical Report on Israel, Fall 1996 XII/4/17 Printed Books on Jewish Cemeteries in the Jewish National and University Library in Jerusalem: An Annotated Bibliography, Jews of Bukhara, Portuguese Jews in the Caribbean, Ashkenazic surname in the Sephardi Diaspora XIII/1/39 Pinchas Lavon Labor Movement Research Institute XIII/3/49 Director of Yad Vashem Archives Describes Plans for the Future XIII/3/66 Holdings of the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People XIII/4/79 Kollels of Eretz Israel as a Genealogical Treasure XIV/1/38 Land claims in Israel XIV/1/46 Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People filming in Belarus and negotiations with Lithuanians and Russians, Chinese Jews XIV/2/47 Paul Jacobi library XIV/2/47 Status of Pages of Testimony XIV/2/47 Yad Vashem Mobilizes Army of Workers to Computerize Names of Holocaust Victims XV/1/7 Genealogy in Israel: May 1999 XV/2/9 Israel State Archives Charges for Retrieving Files XV/4/66 Yad Vashem Opens Multimillion Name Database XVI/1/3 Yad Vashem Opens Combined Library and Archive Building XVI/1/4 Education Program and Facilities Expand at Yad Vashem XVI/1/67 Yad Vashem Still Needs Yizkor Books XVI/2/49 New Resources at the Diaspora Research Institute XVI/3/55 Jerusalem, Spring 2001 XVII/2/7 Indirect Genealogy: Unexpected Genealogical Resources at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People XVII/2/9 Search Bureau Closes Its Doors XVIII/1/67 Israel, Spring 2002 XVIII/2/25 Safed Cemetery Data Now Online XVIII/2/67 Books about Jewish Legion of WWI XVIII/3/67 Describes Gorr Legacy XVIII/4/91 Central Archives Needs Financial Help XIX/1/67 Into the "Heart of Terror" XIX/2/23 Project to Research Turkish and Balkan Countries at Diaspora Research Institute XIX/2/36 Book Review: Right to Exist: A Moral Defense of Israel's Wars XIX/3/65 Genealogical Resources at Yad Vashem XIX/3/10 Israel Has Unique Resources for Jewish Genealogical Research XIX/3/67 Jewish Cemeteries in Jerusalem XIX/3/15 Jews in Eretz Yisrael in 1875 XIX/4/08 1916 Jewish Census XX/1/47 Israel Genealogical Society Plans Major Projects for Annual Conference XX/1/23 Jacobi Indexing Project XX/1/47 Ottoman-era Censuses XX/1/47 Yad Vashem Central Database of Holocaust Victims' Names XX/1/49 19th-century Eretz Yisrael Vital Records XX/2/50 Evaluates Pages of Testimony Database XX/2/70 Montefiore 1875 census XX/2/50 Biographical lexicon of Polish rabbis and admorim XX/3/47 Yad Vashem Unveils Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names XX/3/05 Building a National Family Tree XX/4/32 Comments on Pages of Testimony XXI/1/62 Collecting Genealogical Data in Israel XXI/2/43 IGS Consolidated Surname Index XXI/2/43 Locating Page of Testimony Submitters XXI/2/43 Inventory of Family Trees in Jewish National and University Library XXI/3/52</p><p>Italy Jewish genealogical research in Italy VIII/1/20 Book review: Guide to Jewish Italy VIII/1/55 Center for Italian Jewry X/1/23 Venetian Jewry X/2/51 Jewish Livorno, Italy, 1841 XII/4/62 Two Key Italian Resources for Jewish Genealogists XIII/2/45 Jews of Milan XIII/2/50 Guidebook Series Spotlights Italy's Jewish Heritage XIV/1/40 Italian-Jewish genealogy on the Internet XIV/1/46 Italian-Jewish surnames XIV/3/69 History of the Jews of Italy XV/3/29 The Jews of Livorno, Italy: Archival Sources XVIII/2/42 Rapa and Rapaport Families in Northern Italy in the 15th and 16th Centuries XIX/1/29</p><p>Latvia (see also Russia, USSR) Report on Ukrainian and Latvian archives IX/3/08 Jewish vital statistic records in the Latvian Archives X/1/15 Family History Library IX/1/11 Latvia bars researchers from vital records XI/1/45 Additional metrical records of Latvian towns XI/3/67 Additional Latvian Microfilms XIV/2/24 Success at the Latvian Archives XIII/2/67 Jewish cemeteries in Latvia XIII/4/79 Latvian sources include police lists, directories, history books, old newspapers XIII/4/79 Success with the Latvian Archives XIII/4/98 Records from Latvia in the LDS Collection Include Jewish Information XIV/1/25 Latvian records in the Minsk archives XIV/1/46 Latvian-Jewish Genealogy: Research and Resources XIV/3/32 Cemetery projects in Latvia and Lithuania XIV/3/69 Latvian records in Lithuania XIV/3/69 Latvian resources in the Minsk archives XIV/3/69 Libau: A Gateway for Emigration from the Russian Empire XV/1/20 Jews in Liepaja, Latvia, 1941-1945 XVII/3/17 Book Review: History of Latvian Jews XVIII/1/65 Attitude of Baltic Peoples Toward the Jews During World War II XIX/2/47 Jewish Surnames in the Baltic Countries XX/4/28 Combining Latvian Archives and Yad Vashem Database for Research XXI/1/30 Website for Latvian Jewish Genealogy and Tourism XXI/3/52</p><p>LDS (Mormon) Family History Library Romanian records in LDS Family History Library VII/3/44 LDS Family History Library has Irish-Jewish records VII/3/47 First Belarus Jewish records arrive at LDS Family History Library X/4/07 Microfilms about Jews of Lorraine at LDS Library VIII/4/55 A conversation with the LDS Family History Library's "Jewish expert"--Daniel M. Schlyter IX/4/05 LDS Family History Library Publications List XI/4/75 Jewish vital records from Estonia filmed by Family History Library XII/2/43 Crimean Jewish records at LDS (Mormon) Family History Library XII/3/36 The LDS (Mormon) International Genealogical Index: What Is It? XII/4/07 Recent Acquisitions of the LDS (Mormon) Family History Library XIV/2/23 LDS (Mormon) Family History Library Catalogue to Go Online XV/1/46 Mormon Family History Department Goes on the Internet XV/2/4 Using the Mormon Family History Catalog on the Internet for Jewish Genealogy XV/2/6 Salt Lake City: A Genealogical Candy Store XV/4/3 What Is So Special About the LDS (Mormon) Family History Library? XV/4/6 More on Searching the Family History Library Catalog Online XV/4/66 Should You Order Films in Advance for Your Trip to the LDS (Mormon) Family History Library XVI/1/9 Some Unusual Jewish Records in the Family History Library XVI/1/40 The Records Acquisition Program of the Genealogical Society of Utah XVI/2/13 GSU, Belarus SIG and Litvak SIG Arrange Cooperative Indexing Project XVII/1/3 Difficulties with the CD: Jewish Records in the Family History Library Catalog XVII/2/43 Comments on FHL Catalog Article XVII/3/67 Goodstein Comments on Critical Article XVII/3/67 Restrictions on German Films at Family History Library XVIII/2/32 Exotic Jewish Holdings of the Mormon Library System XVIII/2/33 Says Mormons Are Not Christians XX/2/70 Cease Posthumous Baptism of the Jewish Dead: Clear the Historic Records for Future Generations New Religious Traditions: The Practice of Proxy Baptism XX/1/37 Mormon/Jewish Controversy: An Update XXI/3/06</p><p>Libya About the Jews of Morocco, Algeria and Libya X/3/38</p><p>Lithuania (see also Russia, USSR) Association of Lithuanian Jews in Israel III/1/24 Missing YIVO records may be found V/2/26 Letter from Jewish Community of Kaunas V/4/21 Book on Lithuanian Jewish communities delayed VI/1/41 Vital records of Lithuanian Jewry found VI/2/03 Marijampole society VI/3/39 Jewish Vital Statistic Records in Lithuanian Archives VI/4/04 Book on Lithuanian Jewish communities to be published VI/4/62 A genealogical trip to Lithuania: the host's perspective VII/1/03 Book review: Lithuanian Jewish Communities VII/3/36 Numerous photographic essays of Jewish Lithuania planned VIII/2/57 Explains 1795 Revision List VIII/3/66 Lithuania reluctant to allow microfilming of Jewish documents VIII/4/03 Dvinsk, genealogy and post-Holocaust questions VIII/4/06 A trip to Skoudas, Kavarskas and Ukmerge VIII/4/09 More about the Lithuanian archives IX/1/65 Relates experience with Lithuanian archives IX/1/65 Poses theory for vanished cemeteries IX/3/65 SIG for northwestern Lithuania formed X/2/65 Recommends Lithuanian researcher located in Vilnius X/2/65 Reports on Jewish State Museum of Lithuania in Vilnius X/2/66 Notes difference in response between Lithuanian SSR archives and Republic of Lithuania archives X/4/80 Lithuanian archivist heads speakers at Washington seminar XI/1/21 New archival finds from Lithuania XI/2/10 Archival sources in the Lithuanian State Archives XI/3/03 Using Litvak naming patterns to derive names of unknown ancestors XI/3/22 Holdings in the Vilnius archives XII/1/19 Jewish revision lists in Vilnius archives XII/2/19 Genealogical research in Lithuania--Summer 1996 XII/3/22 Explains Lithuanian revision lists XII/4/83 Jewish Given Names in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania XIII/2/20 Jewish Revision Lists in Lithuanian Archives XIII/3/23 Kaunas Archives XIII/3/25 Revelations and New Discoveries in the Vilnius Civil Registry Office XIV/1/21 Lithuanian Central Civil Register Archives Revisited XIV/1/22 Jewish Genealogical Resources at the Kaunas State Archives XIV/3/29 Cemetery projects in Latvia and Lithuania XIV/3/69 Remembering Lithuanian Shoah Victims: A Research Project XV/1/21 Jewish Life in Pre-Holocaust Panevezys, Lithuania XV/1/39 Book Review: If I Forget Thee...: The Destruction of the Shtetl Butrimantz XV/2/65 Lithuanian Foundation Now Registered As a Nonprofit Organization XV/3/71 Some Lithuanian Discoveries XVI/1/18 Missing Lithuanian Vital Records Found! XVI/4/42 Traveling in Lithuania: The Human Aspect XVI/4/54 GSU, Belarus SIG and Litvak SIG Arrange Cooperative Indexing Project XVII/1/3 Book Review: The Litvaks: A Short History of the Jews of Lithuania XVII/1/73 Researching 18th-Century Census and Tax Lists from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania XVII/3/7 Collection of Box Taxes in 19th-Century Lithuania XVII/3/43 Jewish Photographs in the Lithuanian Archives XVII/3/49 Book Review: The Holocaust in Lithuania 1941-1945: A Book of Remembrance XVIII/3/62 Levanda Index: A Review XVIII/4/47 A Synopsis of 18th-Century Lithuanian-Jewish History XVIII/1/23 18th-Century Records from the Former Commonwealth of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Lithuania: Expresses Concerns About Lithuanian Holocaust Book XIX/1/67 Memel Archives Records Located XIX/1/19 Attitude of Baltic Peoples Toward the Jews During World War II XIX/2/47 Book Review: Sefer HaZikaron LeKehilat Yurburg-Lita XIX/4/75 Records of State Rabbis in the Kaunas Regional Archives XIX/4/19 Methodology for Researching 18th-Century Lithuania XX/3/07 Jewish Surnames in the Baltic Countries XX/4/28 When Good Men Do Nothing XX/4/06</p><p>Methodology Proposal for a Jewish soundex code I/1/05 Genealogical research by mail II/1/17 Jewish soundex--A revised format II/1/19 Is it really luck? V/2/15 Cemeteries: information source about the living V/4/22 A proposed standard for identifying Jewish months in genealogical data bases VIII/3/64 Hiring a professional genealogist: A genealogist's view IX/2/44 Hiring a professional genealogist: A client's view IX/2/45 Prenumeraten as a source for Jewish genealogists X/2/42 Seven guiding principles for family research X/4/44 The soundex problem of false positives XI/1/19 Luzer Isn't Layzer XI/1/19 Researcher's bane: The "misspelled" name XII/2/11 More about Jewish family names: A cautionary tale XII/2/17 Using photographs to solve family puzzles XII/4/48 Evidence! XIV/3/87 Living Vertically: Urban Research Methods XIV/4/6 Holistic Geography XV/1/16 Conducting One-Surname Research: An Introduction XV/3/33 A Blueprint for Conducting One-Surname Research XV/3/35 Converting Hebrew Dates on Tombstones XV/3/71 Genealogical Research in Its Historical Context: Tracing My Family Back Eleven Generations XV/4/17 Corrects Tombstone Inscription Article XV/4/66 Common Hebrew Abbreviations on Tombstones XVI/1/29 More About Reading Jewish Tombstones XVI/1/31 Genealogy: The Great Paper Chase XVI/1/35 The Art of the Interview XVI/4/31 Twelve Steps from the Past to the Present XVI/4/33 Searching for Eve: A Methodological Lesson XVII/2/40 Genealogical Records: Should We Believe What We Read? XVII/2/45 Pinkassim of Those Called to the Torah as a Source for Historical and Genealogical Study XVII/4/23 How to Find Your Relatives or How to Let Them Find You XVII/4/33 Researching Public Archival Collections and Indexing Personal Family Papers XVIII/2/11 Two Major Errors on a Gravestone--Or Just One? XVIII/4/28 Given Name Analysis: A Tool for Single-Surname Research and Very Large Families XVIII/4/62 Beware of Both Documented and Oral Histories XX/2/24 Revisit Your Old Research XXI/1/62 A Template for Evaluating Evidence XXI/2/10 Creating State or Country Databases of Jewish Births, Marriages and Deaths XX/3/45 Creation of Widespread Use of Compound Artificial Jewish Family Names XX/3/17 Brothers, Cousins--or Both: A Family Brainteaser XX/4/09 The Virtue of Persistence: A Story of Discovery and Some Rules Learned Along the Way XX/4/41 A Scientific Approach to the Etymologies of Jewish Surnames XXI/1/09 Looking for a Book or Periodical Article Online at a Library Research Facility XXI/1/18 Guidelines for Converting Documents Written in Hebrew and Yiddish into English XXI/2/19 Using GenMerge to Analyze the Jews of Pusalotas XXI/2/17</p><p>Moldova (see also Russia, USSR) Record Searcher Available in Moldova XIII/2/67 Travel to Bukovina and Moldova XV/4/42 Jewish Genealogical Research in Moldova XVI/3/22 Bukovina Cemeteries, Archives and Oral History XVIII/3/9 Moldovan Ancestry Research XIX/1/09</p><p>Morocco Jewish surnames III/2/23 Civil records of Algeria and Morocco VI/1/29 Books about Spanish Jews of Morocco VII/2/26 Sources of information VIII/2/37 About the Jews of Morocco, Algeria and Libya X/3/38 Sephardic genealogical research in Morocco X/3/40 Bibliography for Jewish genealogy in Spanish Morocco X/3/42 Reports address of Moroccan Jewry source XI/1/67 Moroccan rabbis XI/4/55 Moroccan given names XII/1/44 Moroccan rabbis XIII/3/49 Moroccan community in Buenos Aires XIII/4/79 European Refugees Who Found Shelter in Morocco During World War II XX/3/47 Moroccan Jews in Latin America XX/3/47 Jews of Tetuan XXI/1/47 Sack of Fez in 1912 XXI/1/47</p><p>New Zealand History of Jews of New Zealand I/2/13 Tracing relatives in New Zealand II/2/20 First workshop on genealogy III/2/24 Book review: Not Strictly Kosher--Pioneer Jews in New Zealand V/3/26 Book on Auckland Jewry VII/1/28 Alexander Turnbull Library VIII/2/41 Books on local Jewry IX/1/41 Jewish oral archive established X/2/52 Book review: The Standard for the People: The 150th Anniversary of the Wellington Hebrew Congregation, 1843-1993 XII/1/65 Book Review: Mixed Blessings: New Zealand Children of Holocaust Survivors XIX/1/41 Holocaust Remembrance Day in Auckland XIX/2/54 Jews of New Zealand XX/4/62</p><p>North Africa (see also Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia) North African Jewry V/3/25 Consular records of the Levant and North Africa XIV/3/69</p><p>Poland Jewish records at the Genealogical Society of Utah II/1/03 Index to Polish-Jewish records at Genealogical Society of Utah II/1/05 Book review: The Jews in Poland and Russia--Biographical Essay III/1/38 Origin of Russian-Jewish surnames III/2/03 Breakthrough in access to Polish-Jewish records IV/1/10 Book review: Jews of Posen in 1834 and 1835 IV/2/26 Update on project to microfilm Jewish records in Poland IV/3/12 Doing research in the Polish State Archives IV/3/21 Jewish Historical Institute in Poland V/2/07 Jewish genealogical research in Poland V/2/08 Trip to Poznan: The Poland that was not V/3/16 Professional genealogists in Poland V/4/04 List of former Jewish residents of Lodz V/4/15 Caricatures in Polish vital statistic records VI/1/16 Polish trip for Jewish genealogists planned VI/1/41 Using Prussian gazetteers to locate Jewish religious and civil records in Poznan VI/2/12 Sephardic migrations into Poland VI/2/14 A genealogical tour through Poland VI/3/16 Program Judaica to document Jewish history VI/3/19 Jewish researcher in Poland VI/3/39 Jews in Poland today VI/4/63 Polish maps available in the U.S. VIII/1/58 Weiner discusses developments in Poland and Ukraine VIII/3/64 A 1992 research trip to Poland VIII/4/12 Survey of Jewish cemeteries yields results VIII/4/17 Cites Polish "rip off" IX/1/65 Asks why survey of Polish cemeteries does not include all regions IX/1/67 Polish-Jewish genealogical research--A primer IX/2/04 More on the survey of Polish cemeteries IX/2/13 Book review: Korzenie Polskie: Polish Roots IX/2/61 Polish-Jewish heritage seminar planned for July in Krakow IX/2/65 Asks for clarification (of Polish-Jewish records) IX/3/66 Stettin emigration lists found IX/3/67 Head of the Polish State Archives clarifies policies IX/4/04 Book review: Jews in Poland: A Documentary History IX/4/69 More on Polish-Jewish Genealogical Research X/1/12 Directory of Polish State Archives X/1/14 Archives of the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw X/1/41 Jewish genealogical research in Polish archives X/2/05 Jewish surnames in the Kingdom of Poland X/2/15 Polish sources at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People X/2/21 Success in dealing with Polish archives X/2/48 Gleanings from a symposium on bibliographies of Polish Judaica X/4/56 Polish name lists sought XI/1/67 Nineteenth-Century Congress Documents and the Jews of Congress Poland XI/3/24 Polish Vital Records for the Very Beginner: The Polish Language Challenged XI/4/29 Alternate surnames in Russian Poland XII/2/15 Census records and city directories in the Krakow Archives XII/2/27 Book review: The Jews in Poland and Russia: Bibliographical Essays XII/2/63 Alternative research sources in Poland XII/2/65 Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw XII/3/51 Director General of the Polish State Archives dies XII/3/55 An interview with the new Polish State Archivist XII/4/03 On-site Jewish genealogical research in Poland: an overview XII/4/04 The Jewish cemetery in Warsaw XII/4/56 Book review: Polish Countrysides: Photographs and Narrative XII/4/81 German and Polish Place Names XIV/2/33 List of More than 300,000 Polish Holocaust Survivors Received by USHMM In Washington, DC Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Polish Directories as Resources for Genealogical Information XIII/1/25 Hamburg Passengers from the Kingdom of Poland and the Russian Empire XIII/2/63 Lw¢w Ghetto Records Being Indexed XIII/3/66 Cites Location of Polish Directories XIII/4/98 Jewish Roots in Poland: Pages from the Past and Archival Inventories; And I Still See Their Faces: Images of Polish Jews; Guide to the YIVO Archives; Luboml: Memorial Book of a Vanished Shtetl XIV/1/63 Comments on Jewish Roots in Poland XIV/2/65 Report on Jewish Communities in Poland Today XIV/2/65 How I Found a New Ancestor in Krak¢w, Poland XIV/4/65 18th-Century Polish Jewry: Demographic and Genealogical Problems XV/4/9 Tips on Translating Entries from Slownik Geograficzny XVI/3/49 The Polish Concept of Permanent Place of Residence XVI/3/12 More About Polish Books of Residents' Registration XVI/3/14 Can Jewish Genealogists Successfully Research 18th-Century Poland? XVI/3/16 History Book Illuminates Jewish Life in Poland XVI/3/40 Book Review: History of the Jews in Poland and Russia XVI/3/65 Book Review: In Their Words: A Genealogist's Translation Guide to Polish, German, Latin and Russia Documents. Volume 1: Polish XVI/4/87 Breaking New Ground: The Story of Jewish Records Indexing-Poland Project XVII/1/7 Documenting the Fate of the Jews of Ostrow Mazowiecka XVII/3/19 German and Polish Archival Holdings in Moscow XVII/4/11 Internet Site Names Polish Towns XVII/4/79 Researching Pre-1826 Vital Records in Congress Poland XVIII/2/19 Book Review: Jewish Officers in the Polish Armed Forces, 1939-1945 XVIII/3/62 Ashes and Flowers: A Family Trek to Jewish Poland and Romania XVIII/4/11 Two Polish Directories Online XVIII/4/91 Polish Passport Policy 1830-1930: Permits, Restrictions and Archival Sources XIX/1/21 Book Reviews: Zród a archiwalne do dziejów Ż ydów w Polsce XIX/3/65 Jewish Surnames in Russia, Poland, Galicia and Prussia XIX/3/28 Using Polish Magnate Records for Posen XIX/3/25 Avotaynu Online Database Lists Nobility Archives XIX/4/21 Hidden Jews of Warsaw XX/1/47 Polish archives in Bialystok, Knyszin and Lomza XX/2/50 Polychromatic Tombstones in Polish-Jewish Cemeteries XX/2/39 Tracing Family Roots Using JRI-Poland to Read Between the Lines XX/2/15 Biographical lexicon of Polish rabbis and admorim XX/3/47 Flatow Jewish Cemetery Tombstones Discovered XX/4/79 Polish City Directories Now Online XXI/3/67</p><p>Portugal Jews of modern day Portugal I/1/14 Marranos living in Portugal I/2/14 History of Jews after the Inquisition II/3/27 Bigamy among 18th century Jews, the Jews of Gibraltar III/1/25 Genealogia Hebraica, Portugal e Gibraltar IV/1/24 Book review: Genealogica Hebraica: Jews of Portugal and Gibraltar VI/4/58 Census of Jews of Gibraltar VII/1/27 Volume II of Genealogia Hebraica available VII/2/29 Volume III of Genealogia Hebraica available VII/3/30 Four volumes of Genealogia Hebraica now available VIII/2/42 Historical notes about Jews of Portugal VIII/3/52 Portuguese marranos VIII/3/52 Wants to restore (Lisbon) Portuguese cemetery VIII/4/67 Sources for Spanish and Portuguese genealogy XII/2/43 A Painful Portuguese Odyssey XIII/4/13 Jewish Life in Portugal Today XIII/4/15 Jewish sources on the Iberian Peninsula XIII/4/79 A Portuguese Inquisition Document XVII/4/25 Portuguese Jews of Italy XIX/3/39 Two Portuguese Return to Judaism XX/3/67</p><p>Rabbinic Baal Shem Tov project II/2/03 Ashkenazic Rabbinic Families III/3/07 Descendants of Rashi--Opinion 1 IV/2/07 Descendants of Rashi--Opinion 2 IV/2/09 Descendants of Rashi V/1/Sp.Sup Are all Ashkenazim descended from Rashi? VI/1/28 Historicity of the Rashi descent VI/1/28 Book review: From King David to Baron David VI/2/23 Descent of Rashi: A review VI/2/35 Response to Jacobi's Rashi article VI/2/36 A seventeenth-century Luria manuscript VII/2/19 Questions Luria documentation VII/3/28 Question origin of surname Katz VII/3/28 Comments on Rosenstein's Luria lineage VII/3/47 More books on Rabbinic research VII/4/67 Rosenstein responds to critics VIII/1/57 Can we prove descent from King David VIII/3/29 Rashi's descent from King David VIII/3/31 From the seed of Rashi VIII/3/32 Chabad-Lubavitch literature as a genealogical source VIII/3/40 Expands on Chabad article VIII/4/66 The (Maternal) descent of Rashi IX/2/32 Descent from King David--Part II IX/2/34 Reprint of Otsar ha-rabanim available X/1/66 Spira and Luria families revisited X/4/17 Documenting the descendants of the Vilna Gaon XI/1/47 Which Rapaports Are Also SCHaCH Descendants? XI/3/50 The Reliability of Genealogical Research in Modern Rabbinic Literature XI/4/31 Englard's articles on questions in Rabbinic genealogy XII/1/36 Questions Rosenstein's article XII/2/66 Rappaport family: a response to Paul Jacobi XII/3/46 The Edelman Hoax and the Origins of Anglo-Jewish Aristocracy XIV/2/25 Hasidic dynasties XIII/3/49 Eliyahu's Branches: The Descendants of the Vilna Gaon and His Family XIII/4/96 An Approbation for Neil Rosenstein and Dov Weber XIV/3/90 Sherwood "Forest" Through the Genealogical Trees XIV/4/21 Braude Beginnings XVI/3/43 Documentation of the Besht Found in Magnate Archives XVI/4/89 Questions "Braude Beginnings" XVII/1/75 A Method for Depicting Interconnected Rabbinical Families Simultaneously: The Jewish Historical Clock XVII/3/10 Book Review: Beit Rabbanan: Sources of Rabbinical Genealogy XVIII/1/65 Genealogical Information in Rabbinical Texts: An Examination XVIII/2/43 Rabbinical Genealogies Prepared by Paul Jacobi XVIII/2/28 Genealogical Information in Rabbinic Texts II: An Examination XVIII/4/49 Descent from Rashi: A "Mythological Charter" XIX/3/03 Descent from Rashi: Response to Schellekens XIX/3/05 Descent from Rashi: Response to Rosenstein XIX/3/08 Shmuel Helman of Metz is the Son of Israel Heilprin: An Analysis XIX/4/27 Claims MaHaRam Pedigree Is Valid XX/1/58 The Mother of the Tosfot YomTov Revealed In Code XX/2/41 Ancestry of the Gaon of Vilna: Descent from King David XXI/3/43</p><p>Romania Selected sources on Romania at the Central Archives of the Jewish People VI/1/15 Romanian holdings in the Diaspora Research Institute VI/2/13 Jewish genealogical society founded VII/3/30 Romanian records in LDS Family History Library VII/3/44 Iasi Jewish records missing VII/3/45 Origins of the Jews of Romania and their history up to the Basic Rules of 1831-32 VIII/2/19 Genealogical records (in Romania) have been destroyed VIII/2/42 Says Romanian records exist VIII/3/64 Political situation in country VIII/4/57 Situation in Romania. IX/2/51 Romanian records at the Holocaust Memorial Museum IX/4/18 Research strategies for records still held in Romania IX/4/18 Book review: Companion Guide to Romania X/1/61 Researching Jewish Romania on site XI/1//8 Sources of research for Jewish genealogy in Transylvania XI/2/29 Romania: The Sudits and other Jewish discoveries XII/1/29 Sources for Jewish genealogical research in Romania XII/3/08 Seeking Romaniote Jews XIII/1/67 Genealogy and History: Sources of Jewish Genealogical Research in Romania (18th-20th Centuries) XIII/3/42 Sources of Jewish Genealogical Research in the Romanian Archival System XIV/3/22 Book Review: The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of Jews and Gypsies Under the Antonescu Regime, 1940-1944 XVI/4/87 Jews in Transylvanian Towns in the First Half of the 19th Century XVII/2/29 B'nai Brith Plans Romania Project XVIII/1/78 Ashes and Flowers: A Family Trek to Jewish Poland and Romania XVIII/4/11 Adoption of Names in Romania XIX/2/54 Historical and Demographic Background of Jewish Family Research in Romania XIX/3/45 Resources for Romanian Jewish genealogy XX/4/62 Book Review: Finding Home: In the Footsteps of the Jewish Fusgeyers XXI/1/60 Access to Romanian Archives Moves Forward XXI/2/58</p><p>Russia (also see Belarus, Moldova, Ukraine, USSR) New Jewish Records of Hungary and Russia Available at the LDS Library XIII/1/51 To Register or Not to Register: The Administrative Dimension of the Jewish Question in Czarist Russia XIII/1/6 Understanding Russian-Jewish Given Names XIII/2/3 Use of Revision Lists to Decipher a Family Tree XIII/2/43 RAGAS Reports Status of Record Access in Various Regions XIII/2/54 Hamburg Passengers from the Kingdom of Poland and the Russian Empire XIII/2/63 Jewish Migrations to Eastern Europe XIII/3/12 More on Revision Lists XIII/4/46 Danish Emigrant Lists on Web Include Many Russian Jews XIII/4/98 Notes Spelling of Vsia Rossiia XIII/4/98 Were There Jewish Revision Lists? XIV/1/26 Jewish Migration from Eastern Europe to Sweden from the 1850s to World War I XIV/1/39 Documents of the Soviet Evobshestvkom Committee as a Source of Genealogical Information XIV/1/45 Russian Revision Lists Do Not Always Separate Jews from Christians XIV/1/67 Russian-Jewish Given Names: Their Origins and Variants XIV/2/61 Russian Revision Lists: A History XIV/3/59 Pseudo-Adopted Sons in Russian Revision Lists XIV/3/62 About the Russian Archivist's Soul XIV/3/66 Jewish Given Names in Eastern Europe and the U.S. XIV/3/9 In Which Haystack to Search: More on Sources for Russian-Jewish Genealogy XIV/4/16 Archival Sources for the Genealogy of Jewish Colonists in Southern Russia in the 19th Century XV/2/14 Tackling the Lack of Surnames in 18th-Century Russian Records XV/3/17 Russia's Economic Crisis and Its Effect on Archives and Genealogists XVI/1/17 Residents' Lists and the Russian Military Draft XVI/1/20 Special Features of 20th-Century Resources for Genealogical Research in Russia XVI/1/23 Russian Court Rabbi Records Can Vary in Format XVI/1/67 Jewish Genealogical Research in the Imperial Russian Empire XVI/2/32 Gospodskaia Duma, Summer 1907; Voter Registration Lists XVI/2/38 Gubernskie Vedomosti on 35mm Microfilm XVI/2/40 The Russian National Census of 1897 XVI/3/29 Ships Missing from Migrations from the Russian Empire XVI/4/8 Tracing Our Families Through Russian Pogrom Records XVII/2/36 Book Review: Archival Judaica of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus XVII/3/66 The 1897 All-Empire Russian Census XVIII/3/23 Book Review: In Their Words--Volume 2: Russian XIX/1/60 Jewish Surname Changes Following Emigration from Russia XIX/2/16 New Sources for Genealogical Research in Imperial Russia XIX/2/21 Jewish Surnames in Russia, Poland, Galicia and Prussia XIX/3/28 Russian Exit Passports: Documentation of Emigrants from the Russian Empire XXI/1/03 Mining Russian Revision Lists for Hidden Information XXI/2/07</p><p>Scotland Search for my namesake--Scottish style IV/1/18 Scottish-Jewish Archive Centre IV/2/23 Books on Scottish Jewish history V/1/19 Passage to America through Scotland V/4/07 Scottish Jewish records V/4/15 Books on Scottish Jewish genealogy VII/3/31 Cemetery burials in major Scottish cities VII/4/62 Research using the 1891 census VIII/2/43 Jewish roots in Scotland IX/1/37 Records of Janefield Cemetery found IX/1/43 Glasgow, Scotland Jewry X/2/49 Jewish refugees in Scotland during World War II XI/2/47 Historical database of Scottish Jewry XI/4/56 Jewish tombstone inscriptions in Scotland XI/4/56 Records of 5,000 Jewish burials now accessible XII/1/45 Scottish-Jewish historical database XII/2/42 Scottish Jewish Archives XIII/4/79 Jewish Genealogical Research in Scotland XIX/1/25 Scottish Civil Registration XIX/1/47 Scottish-Jewish Family History XIX/1/47 Online Database of Wills and Testaments XIX/3/52 Access to Public Records XX/3/47 General Register Office Places Vital Indexed Online XXI/1/47 Online Back Issues of Scotsman XXI/1/47 Online Family Histories XXI/1/47 Records of the Aberdeen Hebrew Congregation XXI/2/43</p><p>Seminars Availability of papers given at international seminar IV/1/20 Plans for Summer Seminar on Jewish Genealogy IV/2/33 Report on Seventh Summer Seminar on Jewish Genealogy IV/3/03 Report on plans for Eighth Summer Seminar on Jewish Genealogy V/1/11 Proceedings of Second International Seminar available V/2/17 Third International Seminar: An update VII/1/07 Eleventh Summer Seminar...to be New York Experience VII/4/16 President of JGS Moscow to speak at Twelfth Summer Seminar IX/1/05 Seminar will return to Jerusalem in May 1994 IX/2/14 Fourth International Seminar of Jewish Genealogy Supplement IX/3/31-38 Report on Jerusalem seminar X/2/03 1995 Seminar Planned for Washington, DC X/2/33 Fourteenth Summer Seminar on Jewish Genealogy--June 25-29, 1995 X/3/33 Seminar held in Washington attracts 628 attendees XI/3/08 Speakers at the 15th Summer Seminar on Jewish Genealogy XII/1/21 Report on Boston seminar XII/3/39 Fifth International Seminar on Jewish Genealogy: Paris, July 13-17, 1997 XII/4/29 Annual Genealogy Conferences and the Jewish Genealogist XV/3/11 Call for Papers: 2000 Annual Conference on Jewish Genealogy XV/3/15 Jewish Genealogy Seminars: Then and Now XV/3/16 20th International Conference on Jewish Genealogy XV/4/36 Something for Everyone Is Content of Lectures at Salt Lake City Conference XVI/1/5 Annual Conference on Jewish Genealogy Attracts 625 Registrants to Lectures and Family History Library XVI/2/10 21st International Conference on Jewish Genealogy XVI/2/18 21st International Conference on Jewish Genealogy Registration Form XVI/4/23 London Conference: The Most International to Date XVII/3/16 London Conference Tales XVII/4/22 2002 Jewish Genealogy Conference, Toronto, August 4-9 XVIII/1/13 Toronto Points Way to New Thoughts about Jewish Genealogy Conferences XVIII/3/25 Call for Proposals: 23rd IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy July 20-25, 2003--Washington, D.C. XVIII/3/29 Highlights of 2003 Conference Program in Washington DC XIX/1/16 Preview of 2004 International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in Jerusalem XIX/2/27 Annual Jewish Genealogy Conference Is Where It Is All At XIX/3/14 A Small Taste of What to Expect at the Jerusalem Conference XX/1/21 Jerusalem Conference a Great Success XX/2/47 A Glimpse of What to Expect at the Las Vegas Conference XXI/1/27 Annual Conference Set for New York August 13-18, 2006 XXI/3/25</p><p>Sephardic Sephardic Jewry; recommended readings VI/4/52 Sources for researching my Sephardic ancestors VII/1/18 Spanish Inquisition in Americas VII/1/19 Biography of Sephardic Jews and the Holocaust VII/2/17 The Ottoman Empire and Jewish genealogy VIII/1/17 Ottoman Empire resources VIII/1/18 The Marrano Diaspora VIII/1/09 Additional resources for Sephardic genealogy VIII/2/59 Resources for Sephardic genealogy VIII/3/48 Book review: The Sephardic Journey: 1492-1992 VIII/3/63 Book review: Sephardim in America IX/4/65 Sephardic electronic archive developed X/1/64 Sephardic genealogical research in Morocco X/3/40 Rosh-ha-shana memories and thoughts: Sephardic in form, Jewish in essence XII/3/27 Sephardic reference Sources XII/3/52 Converted and Reconverted: History of the Jews Who Stayed in Portugal (1497-1997) XIII/4/9 Crypto-Jews of the U.S. Southwest XIV/4/31 The Current State of Sephardic Jewish Genealogy XV/1/37 Documentation on Sephardic and Balkan Jewry at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and U.S. National Archives XV/4/20 Book Review: Sephardic Genealogy: Discovering Your Sephardic Ancestors and Their WorldXIX/1/60 New Website for Sephardic Studies XIX/1/33 The 500-Year History of a Sephardic Family XIX/2/37 Book reviews of Sephardic Diaspora XIX/3/52 Crypto-Jews XIX/3/52 Book Review: Dicionário Sefaradi de Sobrenomes XX/1/56 Communities of North Africa XXI/1/47 Major Sephardic Internet Site: Les Fleurs de l'Orient XXI/1/19 Book Review: Sephardic Onomasticon XXI/2/64 Sources for Ottoman Sephardic Genealogy: Turkey and Rhodes XXI/3/35</p><p>Serbia Projects to Document Jews of Turkey, Salonika, Bulgaria, and Belgrade XIV/2/40 Records of Belgrade Jewry Available XVII/2/53</p><p>Slovakia (also see Czech Republic) Book review: Zidovsk‚ N bozensk‚ obce na Slovensku IX/1/63 Slovakian Jewish research IX/4/14 Book review: Parish Registers in Slovakia IX/4/67 Gives hints on Slovak research X/3/65 On-Site Jewish genealogical research in the Czech and Slovak republics XII/3/15 Slovakian state archives XII/3/20 Two Guides to the Slovak Archives XVI/2/65 From Between Galicia and Hungary: The Jews of Stropkov XVIII/1/37</p><p>Slavonia Researching Jewish Family History in Croatia, Slavonia and Hungary XVII/3/28</p><p>South Africa Jewish community of South Africa--an outline II/2/13 Why so many South African Jews are Litvaks V/1/19 Assistance in locating South African relatives VI/2/28 Mormon resources in South Africa VIII/2/44 Addresses of government archives and Jewish organizations VIII/2/44 Augments South African resources VIII/4/67 South African Jewry IX/4/51 "Is the History of the South African Jewish Community Worth Saving?" X/3/46 Gives address for South African Jewry project X/4/82 Compiling list of genealogical resources XII/2/45 Lithuania on the Veldt: Jewish Migration to South Africa XIII/3/19 Addresses for South African research. XIII/3/49 Bank records XIII/3/49 Jews of Marquard XIII/3/49 South African Center for Jewish Migration and Genealogy Studies XVIII/1/33 Locating South African Relatives in the EIDB XIX/2/33 South African Center for Jewish Migration and Genealogy Studies XIX/2/35 German Jewish Migration to South Africa XX/3/25</p><p>South America (also see individual contries) Travelers guide to South America VII/2/39</p><p>Spain History of the Jews of Aragon IV/3/20 Sources for Spanish and Portuguese genealogy XII/2/43 Jews of Andalusia XII/4/62 Inquisition records XIII/1/39 Jews of Andalusia XIII/1/39 Jewish sources on the Iberian Peninsula XIII/4/79 Crypto-Jews around the world XIV/2/47 Notarial papers of pre-Inquisition Spain, records of rural Moselle communities, Alsatian records XIV/3/69 Escape Into Spain: Hispanic Way Station on the Road to Freedom XXI/1/23 Legacy of the Spanish Civil War XIX/4/49</p><p>Sudan Jacob's Children in the Land of the Mahdi: Jews of the Sudan XIII/4/96</p><p>Sweden Resources for Jewish genealogy in Sweden XI/2/39 Jewish Migration from Eastern Europe to Sweden from the 1850s to World War I XIV/1/39 Jewish genealogical society formed in Sweden XIV/1/46 Jewish Immigration to Sweden XX/1/47 Thesis on "Eastern Jews and Other Immigrants in Sweden--1860-1920" XXI/2/43</p><p>Switzerland History of Jews of Switzerland II/1/26 Family names found in various locations IV/1/24 Public records offices in Europe V/1/21 Jews in the Fribourg Territory VI/2/28 Family trees deposited in Zurich VII/4/63 Jews of Berne VIII/2/45 Cemetery in Zwingen VIII/4/57 Towns of Hagenthal and Hegenheim VIII/4/57 Jews of Avenches IX/1/43 Jews of Endingen, Hohenems IX/3/53 Book on bibliography of Jewish family research IX/4/54 Book on Jewish cemetery in Endingen-Lengnau IX/4/54 Memor-Buch Gallingen X/3/47 Mohel book from Alsace/Sundegau region XII/1/45 Swiss Records of Jewish Refugee During the Holocaust XIII/2/49 Wahl family of Reguisheim XIII/4/79 Swiss deported from France during the Holocaust XIV/3/69 Jews of Stuehlingen (Guggenheim, Randegg and Tiengen) XX/1/47 Swiss Baliff Records XX/1/47 Stolpersteine project XX/3/47 Breisach Community XX/3/47 Swiss Victims of the Holocaust XX/4/62 Jews of Pannonia XXI/3/52 Muelheim cemetery XXI/3/52</p><p>Syria Spanish-Jewish "nobility" of Aleppo, Syria VII/2/17 Genealogies of 30 families from Aleppo documented VII/4/61 Dayan Family of Aleppo: Direct Descendants of King David XX/2/31</p><p>Tunisia Matrimonial register of Tunis V/4/13 Biographical index of Tunisian rabbis XI/1/47 Book Review: Our Lives Are But Stories: Narratives of Tunisian-Israeli Women XIX/3/65 Turkey Turkish-Jewish cemeteries of the Ottoman period VIII/3/45 Jews of Smyrna IX/1/38 Jewish surnames IX/1/43 Formation of a Roots Committee for the Jews of Turkey X/1/48 Ottoman Empire Jewry XI/3/65 Jewish settlement in Turkish lands XII/3/56 Jewish forenames and surnames XII/3/56 Dictionary of 2,000 Turkish-Jewish surnames XII/3/56 Leyla Ipekar dies XII/3/57 Projects to Document Jews of Turkey, Salonika, Bulgaria, and Belgrade XIV/2/40 Jewish newspaper of Izmir, Turkey as a genealogical resource XIII/2/50 Sources for Jews of Izmir in Israel XIII/3/49 How to Research Families from Turkey and Salonika XIV/1/28 Jewish Names in Istanbul in the 18th and 19th Centuries XIV/3/63 Consular records of the Levant and North Africa XIV/3/69 Turkish Jews XIV/3/69 Project to Research Turkish and Balkan Jewry at Diaspora Research Institute XVIII/3/30 Gallipoli XIX/2/54 Marriages in Smyrna XIX/2/54 Project to Research Turkish and Balkan Countries at Diaspora Research Institute XIX/2/36 Sources for Ottoman Sephardic Genealogy: Turkey and Rhodes XXI/3/35</p><p>Ukraine (see also Russia, USSR) Crimean Jewish names V/1/05 Resources for Ukrainian genealogical research V/2/04 Eastern Galician records available from Polish archives V/2/26 Important address for (Ukrainian) research V/4/05 Surname list of Berdichev available VI/1/43 Ukraine: Resources for research VI/2/08 Records of Jews in the Vinnitsa Oblast Archives VIII/3/10 Newly available materials on Jews/Jewish history in Lviv VIII/3/12 Yiddish Meidan: An agricultural colony in Ukraine VIII/3/17 Weiner discusses developments in Poland and Ukraine VIII/3/64 Kiev Library has wealth of uncatalogued Judaica VIII/4/47 Visits Jewish cemetery in Cherkassy IX/2/64 Report on Ukrainian and Latvian archives IX/3/08 Canadian archivists visit Ukrainian archives IX/4/09 Report on a recent trip to Ukrainian Archives X/1/03 A meeting with two officials of the Ukrainian Archives X/1/08 Sources for Jewish genealogy in the Ukrainian archives X/2/09 Ukrainian Archeographic Year Book X/2/49 Book describes pogroms in Ukrainian towns in 1919-1920 X/2/67 U.S. commission surveys continue in Ukraine X/3/65 About pogroms in Ukrainian towns in 1919-20 X/3/66 The practicalities of genealogical research in Ukraine X/4/03 Guide to the Jewish records in the Rovno Oblast State Archives X/4/05 On-site research in Ukraine XI/1/44 Reports on Visit to Cherkassy Archives XI/2/64 Travel to Zhitomir, Summer 1995 XI/4/13 Information for Jewish Genealogists in the State archive of Zhitomir oblast XII/1/14 Some information about Zhitomir XII/1/16 Trips to Ukraine and Holland XII/1/39 It's a long way to Uzhgorod, it's a long way to go XII/2/03 The Mountain Jews of the Caucasus XII/2/29 Book review: Jewish Documentary Sources in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus XII/4/81 Jewish Preservation Committee in Ukraine XIII/1/39 Records of the Kiev Board of Craftsmen XIII/3/41 Ukrainian State Oblast Archives as Source of Holocaust-Era Data XIII/3/53 Ukrainian Research and Ancestral Travels XIII/4/33 A Research Trip to Ukraine XIII/4/38 Finding My Ukrainian Family XIII/4/43 Jewish Colonists in Ekaternoslav Guberniya XIV/2/65 Permission to Live in Kiev XIV/2/65 A Trip to Ukraine XIV/4/51 Book Review: Kaminits-Podolsk and Its Environs XV/2/65 Book Review: Jewish Roots in Ukraine and Moldova: Pages from the Past and Archival Inventories XV/3/68 Finding My Roots in Southeastern Ukraine XV/4/28 Jewish Genealogical Research in Ukraine XVI/3/23 Selected Translation of Name Lists and Revisions from the Dnepropetrovsk Archives XVI/3/28 New Ukrainian Jewish Records at the Family History Library XVI/3/54 Book Review: Archival Judaica of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus XVII/3/66 Records From Northern Bukovina XVIII/3/17 Ukrainian Archives in the 21st Century XIX/1/12 Jewish Genealogical Resources in Transcarpathia XIX/2/06 USHMM Records from the Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast Archives XIX/4/23 Our Visit to Karpata-Rus XXI/1/33</p><p>United States Book review: The Source I/1/16 Russian consular records to be indexed I/2/04 Addresses and publications of United States societies II/2/27 HIAS--Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society II/3/02 HIAS--New York II/3/03 HIAS--Philadelphia II/3/06 HIAS--Boston II/3/10 HIAS--Baltimore II/3/11 List of Jewish genealogical societies throughout the world III/1/33 HIAS offices, continued III/2/18 Search publishes research guides to many cities III/2/26 Recent acquisitions at YIVO Institute III/2/29 Book planned--Encyclopedia of Jewish Genealogy III/2/34 Lesser known resources at the U.S. National Archives IV/1/07 A network of people finders IV/2/11 USSR/US archival exchange takes initial step IV/2/15 American Jewish Yearbook: A genealogical resource IV/3/16 Naturalization and Visa records at U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service V/1/12 National Archives branches acquire additional microfilms V/1/22 Book review: Genealogical Resources in the New York Metropolitan Area V/1/29 Search . publishes resource guides V/2/24 Planning continues for Polish-Jewish archives at University of Connecticut V/3/15 AJHS acquires early printed American Judaica V/4/06 Holocaust material at the American Jewish Archives V/4/08 INS success story V/4/22 Public access to U.S. Naturalization index sought VI/1/06 More on Sean Ferguson legend VI/1/42 Mokotoff appointed to FGS Board of Directors VI/2/39 Miriam Weiner wins columnist award VI/2/39 Book review: The Library of Congress VI/3/32 Encyclopedia of Jewish Genealogy to make debut VI/3/37 Jewish Genealogical Family Finder now available on 11 bulletin boards VII/2/16 SAGAS update VII/2/38 Map resources...at the U.S. Library of Congress VII/4/43 Texas company offers computerized tracing services VII/4/65 History of the US-USSR Archival Exchange Program VIII/1/03 New microfilms available from U.S. National Archives VIII/1/36 Leo Baeck Institute resources await seminar attendees VIII/1/39 Greater access to U.S. naturalization records VIII/1/41 Social Security Death Index new genealogical resource VIII/1/42 Book review: The Center: A Guide to Genealogical Research VIII/1/55 Corrections to microfilming of Russian Consular Records completed VIII/1/57 Expands on Library of Congress map article VIII/1/58 AJGS plans to assist Russians looking for American relatives VIII/1/58 AJGS to maintain list of European researchers VIII/2/06 Klau Library and the American Jewish Archives VIII/2/30 Book review: First American Jewish Families VIII/2/53 The elusive Russian Consular Records VIII/3/13 Balch Institute to publish Russian arrivals 1880-87 VIII/3/56 Book review: Ancestry's Red Book VIII/3/63 Book review: State Census Records VIII/4/62 Library of Congress catalogues genealogies VIII/4/64 U.S. Holocaust Museum Archives and Library to open April 23 IX/1/03 Mark Twain: On the Jews IX/1/0 Recent acquisitions of the LDS (Mormon) Family History Library IX/1/11 The Social Security Death Index IX/1/13 RAGAS inquiries producing results IX/1/16 Some guidelines on completing the new RAGAS forms IX/1/18 Clarifies FAST prices IX/1/67 Book review: American Passenger Arrival Records IX/2/60 Russian Consular Records microfilm to be available at regional archives IX/2/66 Death of Berl Kagan represents serious loss to Jewish scholarship IX/2/67 AROS staff to visit Washington, available for JGS meetings IX/2/67 U.S. historical societies as genealogical resources IX/3/05 AJGS plans to index Jewish cemeteries IX/3/06 New sources at the U.S. Holocaust Museum archives IX/3/07 AROS archivists visit U.S. IX/3/42 Russian Consular Records revisited IX/3/45 Rabbi Malcolm H. Stern (1915-1994) IX/4/03 A conversation with the LDS Family History Library's "Jewish expert"--Daniel M. Schlyter IX/4/05 Database of names at Holocaust Museum IX/4/17 Romanian records at the Holocaust Memorial Museum; Research strategies for records still held in Romania IX/4/18 Book review: Sephardim in America IX/4/65 Why it takes so long to get answers from RAGAS IX/4/70 Rabbi Malcolm H. Stern--His associates remember him X/1/24 Report from Salt Lake City, Utah X/1/10 Searching for World War I draft registration records X/1/33 Book review: They Came in Ships X/1/63 Division of still photographs at the U.S. National Archives is a genealogical resource X/1/65 Reports AJGS cemetery project has computer X/1/67 Using U.S. visa records to find post-World War I immigrants X/2/35 A report about RAGAS X/2/46 New sources at the U.S. Holocaust Museum X/2/47 Jewish sources for genealogy at the U.S. Library of Congress X/3/21 Aerial reconnaissance photographs in the National Archives X/3/27 U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum as a genealogical resource X/3/28 Researching post-1906 naturalizations in Washington, DC X/3/30 JGSGW indexes more State Department records X/3/37 Book review: Bridges to An American City: A Guide to Chicago's Landsmanshaften, 1870 to 1990 X/3/64 AJGS cemetery project update report X/4/59 Book review: The Concise Dictionary of American Jewish Biography X/4/75 Book review: An Index to Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society X/4/77 Book review: A Guide to U.S. Military Records X/4/79 List compiled of 1920 residents of Hebrew Orphan Asylum X/4/80 Citizenship records of drafted WWI soldiers who were aliens located in Maryland Archives X/4/82 National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections XI/1/27 Book review: Vom Shtetl an Die Lower East Side: Galizische Juden in New York XI/1/65 Using U.S. archival records to locate a residence before immigration XI/2/15 Using non-microfilmed records at the U.S. National Archives XI/2/35 Roots-Key wins national award XI/2/52 Book review: Judaica Americana XI/2/62 Has Database of Sullivan County (NY) Jewish Cemetery Information XI/2/65 AJHS Responds to Complaint About Access to Child Care Records XI/2/65 Finds List of Galveston Jews XI/2/67 Cites Veteran Administration records as good genealogical sSource XI/2/67 Seminar held in Washington attracts 628 attendees XI/3/08 The Golden Door: Genealogical research in New York City XI/3/11 New and future acquisitions at the Leo Baeck Institute XI/3/21 Genealogical resources at the American Jewish Historical Society XI/3/33 Genealogy resources in the Boston Area XI/4/17 A treasure at the American Jewish Historical Society XI/4/20 New York Orphan Asylum holdings at the American Jewish Historical Society XI/1/28 Interpreting U.S. Immigration Manifest Annotations XII/1/10 Library of Congress needs published catalogs of foreign archives XII/1/67 New edition of Guide to National Archives Records planned XII/2/50 Locates Lower East Side voter registration lists XII/2/67 Research on-line or in person at the Library of Congress XII/3/41 Book review: Genealogical Resources in the Atlanta Area XII/3/70 in the National Capital Area XII/3/70 Book review: Capital Collections: Resources for Jewish Genealogical Research in Washington, DC, Area XII/3/70 Book review: Resources for Jewish Genealogy in the Boston Area XII/3/70 Book review: San Francisco Bay Area: Gold Mine for Jewish Genealogical Research XII/3/71 Second YIVO shipment arrives in New York XII/4/70 Certificates of Arrival and the Accuracy of Arrival Information Found in U.S. Naturalization Records XIV/2/18 The Location of U.S. Naturalization Records XIII/1/36 Index to Georgia's Federal Naturalization Records to 1950 XIII/1/64 The Jewish Year Book 1997 XIII/1/64 The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy XIII/1/64 AJHS Reviews Books on Jewish Communities XIII/2/63 Interview with the Archivist of the United States XIII/3/10 U.S. Immigration Records to Be Indexed XIII/3/37 Patterns of Migrations, 1850-1914 XIII/3/63 Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia XIII/4/98 NARA Federal Records Guide Published XIII/4/98 How to Find a Post-1906 U.S. Immigrant Ancestor XIV/1/41 Freedom of Information Request to INS XIV/2/65 An Analysis and Guide to Beider's Sources in the United States XIV/3/33 A Tip for Locating Pre-1906 Immigrants to the United States XIV/3/42 Jewish Given Names in Eastern Europe and the U.S. XIV/3/9 Green Card Applications Accessible XIV/3/90 U.S. National Endowment for the Humanities Supports Genealogy XIV/3/90 Crypto-Jews of the U.S. Southwest XIV/4/31 Oswego, New York: Wartime Haven for Jewish Refugees XIV/4/46 They Became Americans: Finding Naturalization Records and Ethnic Origins XIV/4/85 Genealogical Resources in New York City Abound for 19th Annual Conference XIV/4/9 Oswego, New York, Refugee Comments on Article XV/1/66 American Jewish Historical Society Library and Archives Close Temporarily XV/2/46 Book Review: The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia XV/2/65 U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service Plans to Create Searchable Index to Naturalization Records XV/3/3 By Way of Canada: U.S. Records of Immigration across the U.S.-Canadian Border, 1895-1954 XV/3/4 Jewish Salt Lake City of the Past XVI/1/37 A Proposal to Improve Service for Genealogists at INS XVI/2/29 Jewish Genealogical Research in Florida XVI/3/9 Yes, Lobby for Open Access to Archives--But Why Not in the U.S. Too? XVI/3/47 Ellis Island Passenger Arrival Database 98 Percent Complete XVI/4/3 WWI Draft Records Provide Lead XVI/4/29 Vermonter May Have Come Through Canada XVI/4/89 Book Review: The American Census Handbook XVII/1/73 Strategies for Using the Ellis Island Database XVII/2/3 Mexican-U.S. Border Crossing Records XVII/2/18 Baltimore Immigrant Lists Available XVII/3/40 Genealogy Institute at Center for Jewish History Provides Workshops and Group Visits XVII/3/61 Between the Lines: Morris Citron and the Early INS XVII/4/5 The Ellis Island Database: From the Micro to the Macro Level: The Cases of Lechovich and Baranovich XVII/4/8 Using the American Jewish Year Book XVII/4/in Family History Research XVII/4/17 Bibliography of Books about North American Jewish Communities Now Online XVII/4/70 World War II U.S. "Old Mens" Draft Registration XVIII/1/10 "Likely Public Charge" XVIII/1/67 Subtleties in Using the One-Step Ellis Island Website XVIII/2/6 Using The New York Times Online Backfile XVIII/2/22 Subtleties in Using the One-Step 1930 Census Website XVIII/3/3 Wills and Probate Estates in the United States XVIII/3/36 HIAS Location and Family Service XVIII/4/5 HIAS Boston Individual Arrival Cards, 1882-192 XVIII/4/7 U.S. National Archives II Highlights XVIII/4/17 Center for Jewish History Offers Genealogy Fellowship XIX/1/08 Book Review: Going Greek: Jewish College Fraternities in the United States, 1895-1945 XIX/3/65 Pacific Crossings: Europe to America Via the Trans-Siberian Railroad XIX/3/18 A Day at the Center for Jewish History XIX/4/03 Who Rests in the Philadelphia Cemetery? A HIAS/INS Case Study XIX/4/06 Persecution or Immigration Politics? Esther, Max and President Wilson XX/1/19 Secret Jews of the American Southwest XX/1/29 Children Under 16 Unaccompanied by a Parent: The Family Zuser XX/2/43 Genealogical Resources at the American Jewish Archives XX/3/15 New Acquisitions at U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum XXI/1/13 U.S. Courthouse Records Hold Valuable Genealogical Information XXI/2/15 The Port of New York Before Ellis Island XXI/3/27</p><p>Venezuela Venezuelan Jewry: A Brief History XVIII/3/42</p><p>Zimbabwe Jews of Zimbabwe XIX/2/54</p><p>USSR/Russia (also see Belarus, Moldova, Russia, Ukraine) Are we descendants of Khazarian Jews? II/2/05 Book review: The Jews in Poland and Russia--Biographical Essay III/1/38 Origin of Russian-Jewish surnames III/2/03 Russian business directories as aids in genealogical research IV/2/03 Russian government to allow genealogical inquiries IV/3/02 Book review: Russia Gathers Her Jews IV/3/17 Matriken records V/1/34 U.S.-Soviet accord include plans for genealogical exchange V/2/03 Vital statistics in Czarist Russia V/3/06 U.S./USSR Genealogical Exchange Advisory Board holds meeting V/4/03 Book review: Handbook for Archival Research in the USSR V/4/10 New strategies necessary for Soviet inquiries VI/1/06 Soviet success stories VI/1/08 U.S. genealogical team visits Soviet archives VI/2/03 Vladmir Tarasov answers VI/2/05 Soviet trip (by archivists) delayed VI/3/21 Genealogical inquiries to Soviet Union VI/3/39 Russian sources in Western libraries VI/4/20 Russian business directories VI/4/23 A cemetery in (Irkutsk) Siberia VI/4/50 Experiences on a trip to the former Soviet Union VII/1/06 Genealogical service inaugurated for Russia, Belarus and Ukraine VII/2/03 Commentary on RAGAS agreement VII/2/04 Writing to Russia for genealogical information VII/3/04 Russian business directories--an update VII/3/13 Jewish patronymic and metronymic surnames in Russia VII/4/03 My Russian Research VII/4/29 History of the US-USSR Archival Exchange Program VIII/1/03 More Russian genealogical resources found in the U.S Library of Congress VIII/1/07 Jewish surnames in the Russian Empire VIII/3/03 Report on a Jewish genealogical seminar in Moscow VIII/3/08 Records of Jews in the Vinnitsa Oblast Archives VIII/3/10 RAGAS creates computer link between Washington and Moscow VIII/3/67 A note on accessing Russian voter lists VIII/3/67 Bukharan Adventure VIII/4/15 Some glimpses of studying Jewish genealogy in Russia VIII/4/31 International conference on genealogy held in Russia VIII/4/35 Records of Russian magnates as a genealogical resource VIII/4/37 Book review: Bukharian Jews VIII/4/62 Joint Distribution Committee records in Russia VIII/4/64 Survey of Judaica in former Soviet Union planned VIII/4/65 Little known sources of Russian-Jewish data IX/1/06 Jewish genealogical material in the archives of the former USSR IX/1/09 JGS Moscow meeting hears talk by literary critic Lev Anninsky IX/1/66 Reports of experiences dealing with the New Russia IX/1/67 A list of officers of Jewish Prayer Societies in Russia, 1853-55 IX/2/25 Book review: Synagogues, Prayer Houses and Their Employees in the Pale of Settlement and Kurland and Livonia Provinces of the Russian Empire, 1853- 1854 IX/2/59 Russians seek American relatives IX/2/64 Corrects misspelled town names IX/2/64 Book review: A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from the Russian Empire IX/3/10 Theories, assumptions and implications of some problems in researching Eastern European records IX/3/12 Jewish genealogical research in Russia--the view from Moscow IX/3/28 How to do research in the former USSR--the view from Washington IX/3/39 Free market economy coming to Eastern European services IX/3/44 E-mail to former Soviet Union available IX/3/65 Describes Joint Distribution Committee records in Russian archives IX/3/67 Russian Empire Crown Rabbi Vital Statistic Registers X/1/17 Book review: The Jews of Kurdistan X/1/63 Group plans to document and preserve Jewish artifacts of the Russian empire X/1/65 Genealogy correspondence course announced in Russia X/1/66 Evaluates voter registration lists used to compile Beider book X/1/67 E-Mail service to Russia available through commercial venture X/2/65 What may be learned from 19th-century czarist Jewish birth records and revision lists X/3/03 A catalogue of Jewish monuments in the territory of the former Soviet Union X/3/15 Missing in Russia Organization formed X/3/44 First issue of JGS journal analyzes genealogical life in Russia X/3/45 Book review: Research Guide to Materials on Russian Jewry in Selected Archives of the Former Soviet Union X/3/61 Book review: Literature on Jews in Russian, 1890-1945 X/4/79 ]Materials from the 1897 All-Empire Russian census held by the State Historical Archives of Latvia XI/1/15 Book review: Documentary Sources on Jewish History in the Archives of the CIS and Baltic States XI/1/63 Jewish treasures in the former Soviet archives: Opportunities and problems XI/2/07 Sources for genealogy in the Archives of the former Soviet Union XI/2/13 Thoughts on Jewish given names from analysis of czarist records XI/2/19 Migration from the Russian Empire: Lists of Passengers Arriving at the Port of New York XI/2/61 K”nigsberg documents go well beyond description in finding indexes XI/2/64 Beyond the metricals: Records from the Russian Department of Police XI/4/03 Documents of Jewish genealogical value in the Radzivill Archive of the State Historical Archives of Belarus XI/4/28 The current state of archival research in the CIS XII/1/06 Russian books of residents as a genealogical resource XII/1/23 Jews of Kurdistan and Zakho XII/1/44 Book review: Literature on Jews in Russian, 1890-1945 XII/1/65 Diaspora Research Institute documenting Carpatho-Russian jewry XII/1/66 Moscow' Osobyi Archives: a new genealogical source at U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum XII/2/37 What Is a box tax? XII/2/39 Book review: The Jews in Poland and Russia: Bibliographical Essays XII/2/63 Jewish agricultural colonies in New Russia XII/3/33 Russian archival and historical terminology XII/3/35 Crimean Jewish records at LDS (Mormon) Family History Library XII/3/36 Gubernskie Vedomosti: a genealogical resource XII/4/27 Book review: Jewish Documentary Sources in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus XII/4/81</p>

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